Tag: illness

  • What Happened When I Stopped Taking Mounjaro After 5 Months of Transforming My Body

    What Happened When I Stopped Taking Mounjaro After 5 Months of Transforming My Body


    • READ MORE:  Weight loss jab now linked to more than 100 deaths

    A mother who saw instant success on the ‘King Kong’ weightloss jab Mounjaro said she was left looking like ‘Skeletor’ when she stopped using the injections.

    Ellen Ogley, 42, from Yorkshire, weighed 16st 12lbs and was a size 18 at her heaviest.

    While she lost 3st on an ‘unsustainable diet’ she turned to the
    weight loss
    medication Mounjaro in May last year to try and transform her body.

    The mother-of-three said it had an instant effect and stopped her incessant raiding of the snack cupboard.


    ‘I thought it was going to be another diet trend but the food noises got switched off,’ said Ms Ogley, who used the injections for five months.

    ‘As soon as I went on it I realised “I’ve not touched the snack cupboard”.’

    This change helped her make healthier choices in other aspects of her life and she started exercising.

    Soon the nursery manager had lost a further 3st, taking her down to a total body weight of around 10st.


    However, she said the process of weaning off the drug came with a worrying side effect.

    Mrs Ogley recalled how, in coming off the jab, she became obsessed with getting as ‘skinny as possible’.

    ‘I got trolled, they called me Skeletor. I was being told I looked like a 60-year-old,’ she said.

    Skeletor is the name of a skull-faced villain from the 80s children’s cartoon He-Man and the Masters of the Universe.

    Losing muscle mass is known side-effect of weight loss jabs as well as other rapid weight loss methods.

    While dieters lose fat, they can also shed muscle if they consume very few calories and fail to perform muscle-building exercises.

    It was nasty social media comments, alongside Mrs Ogley’s husband’s concerns that she looked ‘ill’,  that gave the wake-up call she needed.

    Mrs Ogley took up weight training and said this—combined with some healthy swaps—had a made a world of difference.

    ‘I have abs at 42—it blows my mind,’ she said.

    ‘I have hacks in place. If I’m craving sweets I have [high protein] Greek yoghurt, berries and granola.’

    ‘I still have takeaways but I exercise portion control.

    ‘We make chicken kebabs as fakeaways instead of ordering them as takeaways.’

    She said making these swaps and cutting back on alcohol had helped prevent the weight from coming back.

    A study,
    published last month
    , warned that many patients using weight loss jabs risk piling the pounds back on within 10 months of quitting the injections.

    Scientists at Oxford University discovered the effects of GLP-1 drugs like Wegovy are short-lived if patients do not maintain a healthy lifestyle afterwards.

    Mrs Ogley said she hopes her example shows others they can maintain their weight loss if they stop using the drugs.

    She said she’d battled comfort eating and binge drinking after being diagnosed with cervical and ovarian cancer in 2023.

    ‘I’d have two to three takeaways a week. My drinking was excessive,’ she said, adding that she’d often share three bottles wine with her husband on an evening out.

    ‘It

    helped numb everything.’

    As part of her cancer treatment, she was forced to undergo a hysterectomy—a major surgery to remove the uterus—but it was recommended she lost weight before going under the knife, to reduce the risk of complications.


    ‘I said to myself “if I come out the other side I will try and take control of my health”,’ she said.


    While she started with an highly restrictive fasting diet that helped her lose 3st she knew it wasn’t sustainable.

    ‘I was doing it in not a very healthy way,’ she said.

    ‘I was almost starving myself.’

    This was when she turned to Mounjaro.

    As of Monday, obese patients in England will be able to access the ‘revolutionary’ weight-loss jab Mounjaro—free of charge—
    directly from their family doctor
    .

    Mounjaro, also known as tirzepatide, will be offered to around 220,000 people over the next three years under new
    NHS
    prescribing rules.

    GPs can now prescribe the drug to patients with a BMI over 40—classed as severely obese—and at least four obesity-related health conditions, such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure or sleep apnoea.

    Mounjaro is a  weekly jab that can help patients shed up to a fifth of their body weight in a year.

    More than a million people in the UK are already using it via private clinics, where it costs around £250 a month.

    However, until now, only a limited number of patients could access it on the NHS via specialist weight-management services.

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  • Dermot Murnaghan, 67, Shares Heartbreaking Prostate Cancer Diagnosis

    Dermot Murnaghan, 67, Shares Heartbreaking Prostate Cancer Diagnosis

    Newsreader Dermot Murnaghan today revealed he has been diagnosed with ‘advanced’ stage four prostate
    cancer
    .

    The former
    Sky News
    and
    BBC
    broadcaster has said he is ‘feeling well’ despite the devastating news.

    ‘I’m blessed to be fortified by the monumental love and support of my wife, family and close friends’, he said today.

    Stage four is the most advanced stage of cancer, meaning cancerous cells have spread beyond the prostate and into other areas of the body. In these cases it is generally not curable, but it can treatable.

    The 67-year-old, who has been married to his wife Maria for almost 36 years and has four children, revealed his diagnosis on
    Twitter
    this afternoon.

    ‘I’ve been diagnosed with stage four advanced prostate cancer I’m fortunate to have a simply outstanding medical team looking after me, who I can’t thank enough – they are administering the best possible care with expertise, compassion and sensitivity’, he wrote.

    ‘I’m responding positively to their excellent treatment, and feeling well’.

    Mr Murnaghan also issued a plea to men to get tested, especially if they are aged over 50, in high-risk groups or have symptoms. The Mail is campaigning for a national prostate cancer screening programme for high-risk men, similar to that for breast cancer, which could prevent hundreds of deaths.



    He also said that he is aiming to take part in Sir Chris Hoy’s fundraising charity bike ride in September which will raise awareness and funds for cancer charities across the UK.

    The Olympian announced he had a terminal diagnosis for prostate cancer in October 2024.

    The Tour de 4 ride, which will begin and end at the Sir Chris Hoy velodrome in Glasgow on September 7, aims to change the perception of people living with stage four cancer.

    Mr Murnaghan said today: ‘Needless to say my message to all men over 50, in high risk groups, or displaying symptoms, is get yourself tested and campaign for routine prostate screening by the NHS.

    ‘Early detection is crucial. And be aware, this disease can sometimes progress rapidly without obvious symptoms’.

    NHS guidance says men over the age of 50 are at highest risk of developing prostate cancer, but Sir Chris wants to help men get screened earlier.

    About one in eight men will get prostate cancer in their lifetime, according to the charity Prostate Cancer UK, and the disease often has no symptoms in its earlier stages.

    Dermot left Sky after more than 15 years in 2023.

    Before joining Sky News, Murnaghan presented ITV’s News At Ten and the BBC Ten O’Clock News – now known as BBC News At Ten – as well as Channel 4 News.

    Murnaghan has also hosted the BBC’s quiz programme Eggheads.

    While at Sky News he was the journalist who announced the death of Queen Elizabeth II outside Buckingham Palace as well as numerous elections in the UK and the US

    .




    He began his career as a trainee reporter at local newspapers before joining Channel 4 as a researcher. He later became a reporter for the broadcaster’s The Business Programme.

    After a brief stint in Switzerland to present the European Business Channel,  Mr Murnaghan returned to Britain to host the business segments on The Channel 4 Daily, a new breakfast show by Channel 4.

    He then made the move to ITV in the early 1990s, where in 1997 he broke the news of the death of Princess Diana.

    The veteran journalist switched broadcasters again in the early 2000s, joining BBC Breakfast as one of the lead presenters from 2002 to 2007.

    Dermot formed a very popular partnership with Natasha Kaplinsky.

    He was also a regular fixture on the six o’clock and ten o’clock news.

    He moved to Sky News in October 2007, where he has remained until his final show almost 16 years later.

    Away from news, he presented the popular BBC quiz, Eggheads.

    Murnaghan presents true crime documentary series Killer Britain and the podcast Legends Of News.




    In 2017 the newsreader was ‘wiped out’ by a driver while he was cycling.

    The accident, which he described as a ‘hit-and-run’, left him with a number of cuts and bruises as well as a damaged bike.

    He shared the image of his injured face on social media with the caption: ‘This is why I haven’t been on the air for two days.’

    Speaking to Sky News, he

    said afterwards: ‘On an empty road in north London a guy in a car on a mobile phone pulled out from the side of the road without indicating.

    ‘I swerved that, but a millisecond later he U-turned into me and wiped me out.’

    Mr Murnaghan, who is an avid cyclist, explained that he had woken up at 6am to go cycling with friends before work and had been wearing a hi-vis jacket.

    He said: ‘Twenty minutes later I was lying by the side of the road with a broken cycle helmet and a hobbled bike, still spinning, lights shining – and a variety of cuts, bruises and abrasions, but thankfully no broken bones.’

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