Any fast weight loss can include some muscle, not just fat — and GLP-1 medications can drive fast loss. The good news: the levers most associated with helping support lean mass are simple and within your control.
The two levers that matter most
| Lever | Why it’s associated with supporting lean mass |
|---|---|
| Adequate protein (~1.2–2.0 g/kg/day) | Supplies the building blocks muscle needs and is associated with helping the body hold lean mass during a deficit. |
| Resistance training (2+×/week) | Gives muscle a repeated reason to stay — strongly associated with retaining lean mass while losing fat. |
These work best together. Protein without training, or training without enough protein, is associated with weaker results than the pair.
Make it stick
- Hit protein consistently, not perfectly. A target you reach most days beats an ideal you hit twice a week.
- Don’t crash the deficit. Extremely rapid loss is associated with more lean-mass loss; a steadier pace is gentler on muscle.
- Keep training simple so you’ll actually do it — a couple of short full-body sessions a week is enough to start.
You can’t fully control the fat-to-muscle ratio you lose, but protein and resistance training are the two dials you can turn — turn both, consistently.
This is general education, not medical advice. Talk to your clinician before starting a new exercise program, and to a registered dietitian about your protein target.