Keep Lean Flow
11 ingredients. One scoop. Built specifically for GLP-1 medication users.
You're Spending $108/Month on the Wrong Supplements
Open your bathroom cabinet. Count the bottles.
There's the magnesium you bought on Amazon after reading a Reddit thread about GLP-1 constipation. The electrolyte powder your friend recommended. The ginger capsules you grabbed from Whole Foods for the nausea. The B-vitamin complex from CVS because you read somewhere that GLP-1 depletes your B-vitamins. The digestive enzymes you added last month because nothing else was helping with the bloating.
Five products. Five bottles. Five things to remember every morning when you can barely stomach water.
And here's the part nobody tells you: most of them aren't working. Not because the ingredients are wrong. Because the forms are wrong, the doses are wrong, and none of them were designed for what your body is actually going through on a GLP-1.
You're spending $108/month on a patchwork solution that's still incomplete.
Problem With Buying Supplements Separately
When you buy five separate supplements for your GLP-1, you're making five separate assumptions. That the magnesium is the right form. That the ginger has enough active gingerols. That the B-vitamins are in a form your body can actually use. That the electrolyte ratios are calibrated for someone eating 40% less food. That the digestive enzymes cover all three macronutrients.
Most of the time, most of those assumptions are wrong.
The magnesium is almost certainly oxide — the cheapest form with roughly 4% bioavailability. 96% of what you swallow passes through without being absorbed. It causes diarrhea, not healthy regularity.
The ginger capsules are dried ginger powder, not a standardised extract. The amount of active gingerols per capsule is unstated, unverified, and almost always below the dose used in clinical research for nausea.
The B-vitamins are inactive forms — pyridoxine for B6 instead of P5P. Your liver has to convert them before they do anything, and that conversion is inefficient when your body is under metabolic stress from rapid weight loss.
The electrolyte powder was designed for athletes sweating during exercise. The ratios are wrong for someone who's chronically under-eating. And it contains zero digestive support, zero nausea relief, and zero magnesium.
The digestive enzymes are generic. They weren't formulated for a digestive system that's been medically slowed by a GLP-1. Most only cover one or two macronutrients, not all three.
Five products. Five compromises. Still incomplete.
The Real Cost
What You Could Be Taking Instead
Side by Side: Forms and Doses
Keep Lean is a dietary supplement, not a medication. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Consult with your healthcare provider before starting any new supplement, especially if you are taking prescription medications. Individual results may vary.