Ever feel like you’re in a galaxy far, far away? Well, swathes of Ozempic customers seem to.The hot-topic weight loss drug is a popular commodity among everyone from Jeremy Clarkson to Greg Davies, to James Corden, Sharon Osbourne and Amy Schumer, but as with anything unnatural pumped into the human body, there tends to be uncomfortable repercussions.In her latest column published by The Daily Mail, Dr. Sheila Nazarian dissected the so-called ‘Darth Vader effect’, which finds Ozempic users being able to hear their own breathing, heartbeat, blood flow and eye movements.”/Sufferers say it sounds like Darth Vader is in their head,” she wrote, referring to the iconic black-masked Sith Lord from the movies.
In the field, this ‘bizarre’ condition is officially known as patulous Eustachian tube dysfunction (pETD).”Doctors believe the loss of fat surrounding the Eustachian tube within the inner ear can prevent it from closing properly, creating a disturbing echo chamber within the body,” Dr. Nazarian explained.”While I personally have not yet encountered a patient with this condition, I suspect we may begin seeing more unusual side effects as increasingly effective weight-loss medications hit the market.”The next generation of obesity drugs – like retratrutide – are generating enormous buzz. Early studies suggest it may produce faster and more dramatic weight loss than today’s GLP-1 medications.”Further along her op-ed, the doc pointed to the fact that our bodies are not designed for ‘extreme, rapid shifts without consequences’, therefore, the growing number of side effects is not too surprising.”When weight drops too quickly, whether from bariatric surgery, crash dieting or GLP-1 medications, the body can respond in unexpected ways. We’ve already seen reports of gallstones, hair loss, muscle wasting, facial aging, nutritional deficiencies and changes in skin quality associated with dramatic weight drops,” she argued.