If you have been noticing swelling in your hands or ankles since starting a GLP-1 medication, you are not alone. Fluid retention is a common reaction in the first weeks of treatment, and tracking when it shows up makes it easier to tell the difference between water weight and actual fat gain. PeptPro was built for exactly this kind of observation. You log your weight daily, mark swelling episodes with date and time, and watch patterns emerge over weeks. See how it works here.
Fluid retention is common in the first weeks of GLP-1 treatment and can be mistaken for weight gain. Learn the signs, the dietary triggers, and how tracking in PeptPro helps you tell water retention from actual fat accumulation.
Why the Body Retains Fluid at the Start of GLP-1 Treatment
GLP-1 receptor agonists like semaglutide and liraglutide work by mimicking a hormone that targets areas of the brain involved in appetite regulation. The result is a reduction in hunger signals and slower gastric emptying, which naturally leads people to eat less. What many people do not expect in the first weeks is noticeable swelling or a feeling of puffiness, particularly around the ankles, hands, and face.
This happens because the body is adjusting to a new metabolic state. When food intake drops quickly, the kidneys may retain sodium and water as a compensatory mechanism. At the same time, GLP-1 agonists cause some fluid redistribution in the body, which can show up as edema in the early phase of treatment. According to a 2021 review published in Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, fluid-related side effects are among the most commonly reported in the first month of therapy.
This is not fat gain. The scale may show a number that feels discouraging, but the underlying cause is often temporary water retention rather than an actual increase in body fat. Factors that tend to worsen retention in the first weeks include high sodium intake from processed foods, low water consumption, and carbohydrate-heavy meals that trigger insulin spikes and subsequent fluid shifts. People who reduce their food intake dramatically without adjusting sodium consumption are particularly prone to this effect.
Daily weight logging helps separate true weight changes from normal water fluctuations. With PeptPro you log daily weight and mark swelling symptoms to tell water retention from actual weight gain. Over a week of consistent entries, a pattern emerges that makes it clear whether the scale is reflecting fat loss, water retention, or a combination of both.