The girls are taking husky.
Instead of breaking the bank for coveted and pricey weight-loss shots, the skinny on a budget are turning to the high-fiber peel of a plant.
And the organic alternative is being hailed as an inexpensive answer to their pesky weight problems.
“Psyllium bark is now gaining popularity as the ‘Poor Man’s Ozempic,'” family medicine physician Enaka Yembe, 52, of Louisiana, gushed in the closed captions of a viral TikTok video.
“Psyllium Husk and Ozempic are both very different substances,” she explained to a fan base of over 32,000 followers, “but with similar effects!”
And virtual waist-watchers are eating it up.
As the celebrity-led “thin is in” trend continues — thanks to the fat-melting alchemy of injectables like Ozempic and Wegovy, which can cost around $1,000 a month — frugal folks trying to shed some are taken to get home made shots. drugs, hoping for fine results.
Homemade mixes like “Ricemáchic” and “Oatzempic” received social media acclaim at the top of the year. Both drinks are supposed to help those who know how to slim down through the powers of raw rice and oats.
However, “chicken water,” a mixture of chia seeds, lemon, and H2O, has recently usurped the throne from grain-based drinks. Online, consumers say the hand-drinking drink has worked wonders in shrinking their waistlines.
Girls who take psyllium husks, which can cost as much as $8, claim the same thing.
Soluble fiber, primarily used in mild laxative products like Metamucil, boasts many benefits, including relieving constipation and diarrhea, as well as managing blood sugar and cholesterol levels, according to the Cleveland Clinic. It can also cause weight loss.
Online, Yembe’s even specified the similarities shared by the sawdust-like substance and Ozempic.
“They both cause feelings of fullness,” she captioned her post. “They both stabilize blood sugar.”
“Both have been scientifically proven to help with weight loss,” the doctor pointed out before describing their differences.
“Mechanism of Action,” Yembe wrote, calling it the main dissimilarity.
“Psyllium husk is a fiber, it binds to water, it forms a voluminous gel in the stomach, it slows the emptying of the stomach, which keeps you full longer,” she explained. “It also slows down the absorption of sugar.”
“Ozempic,” continued the expert, “tells your brain that you are full, slows digestion and stimulates insulin production.”
Yembe went on to note that psyllium husk is available as a dietary supplement, while Ozempic shots require a prescription. She then listed the medical consequences of each aid.
“The side effects of Ozempic are loss of muscle mass, nausea, vomiting, low blood sugar levels, pancreatitis and risk of thyroid disease in some people,” the insider advised. “Side effects of psyllium husk [are] gastrointestinal symptoms, bloating or gas [and] redness.”
But small seekers are more impressed by the advantages of the plant.
“Hot girls drink psyllium husks every night at 8pm so they can stay regular, help their insulin resistance and lose weight fast,” Emily, an online naturalist, wrote in the caption of video footage of her knocking down the good.
Megan Ringo, a 24-year-old content creator, also applauded the powder for fixing her digestive system.
“[Psyllium husk has] it was working like magic for me,” she wrote in one clip.
But scientists have not yet officially considered psyllium husk a cheap substitute for injections.
“We don’t have any clinical trials comparing the two,” registered dietitian Julia Zumpano told the Cleveland Clinic. “Psyllium husk can support weight loss, but not to the extent that a drug has the potential to.
“They work differently in the body.”
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