All in the list seem to be good (have been used by 1 or more people with successful results) - but I think pretty much all of them require a bank wire transfer or money transfer using something like wise.com or tazapay.com, etc.
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Perhaps of interest to people:
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CTStan
#11
How do you minimize risk, which although is low can be serious? Is there a change in the urinary environment which increases the possibility of UTI or genital infection? If so, is that related to the amount of sugar excreted and therefore the importance of diet in avoiding such risk? If not, what is the mechanism and what, if anything can be done to minimize the risk associated with canagliflozin? And since a known rapamycin risk is the possibility of bacterial infection, are we setting up a higher risk situation by taking rapa and canagliflozin together?
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These are all really good questions, and I think we do need to try to get answers to them.
I may be wrong, but my thinking is that the UTI risk is higher for females, so I’ve been less concerned about that (as a male).
I also take a lower dose (10mg of empagliflozin) - and do it in a pulsed dosing - approx. 3 weeks on, 1 week off. Not that there is any research to support this approach.
I also have Azithromycin on hand if I get any bacterial infections - so can immediately start taking it if I do have any problems.
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CTStan
#13
I just priced Canagliflozin at Alldaychemist. $2.20 per 100 mg tablet. They are reliable, but that is quite a bit higher than what I was expecting. Are there any other proven reliable India pharmacies?
See our list of reliable online pharmacies
Check out canagliflozin and empagliflozin
@RapAdmin What do you think about taking Canagliflozin PRN, on days when the diet is planned to be less than optimal? Do you see it working quickly enough to matter on your CGM? I use enough carb restriction to not need it on most days, but then there are days when I know I’m not going to be good. Acarbose PRN has led to some awful gastric upset, so I’m not using it any longer.
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Here is my experience with canagliflozin:
Canagliflozin for Anti-aging - One Month and 4 Month Updates
I’ve been taking 10mg empagliflozin for the past two months and its been going well. It has a big impact on flattening gluocose spikes, which seems to be a good thing for anti-aging (in males). I generally try to avoid processed foods and simple carbs - but do eat a lot of salads which can sometimes have a higher carb load, or some fruit like apples, which I like.
I also dose acarbose occasionally with meals when I haven’t taken empagliflozin or later in the day if I’ve taken empagliflozin earlier in the morning - but have the same issue as you with acarbose - a lot of gas most of the time, so its far from optimal.
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https://www.goodrx.com/sglt2-inhibitors
Wow these are super-expensive outside of India
Yes… $600 per month vs $60 a month from India.
shc
#19
I’ve been taking it on an as needed basis too. This is because I’ve read reports of fatigue and because SGLT2i selectively reduce levels of blood glucose only when it is high.
So at least as far as the CGM related benefits go, I don’t see a need unless there’s a high carb meal.
I however don’t know about other benefits or disadvantages. I’ve imagined that the cardioprotective and renal-protective properties of SGLT2i are downstream from lowering the blood glucose. But I might be wrong.
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A new SGLT2 inhibitor paper (open access):
Sodium-glucose-cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) demonstrate large cardiovascular benefit in both diabetic and non-diabetic, acute and chronic heart failure patients. These inhibitors have on-target (SGLT2 inhibition in the kidney) and off-target effects that likely both contribute to the reported cardiovascular benefit. Here we review the literature on direct effects of SGLT2is on various cardiac cells and derive at an unifying working hypothesis. SGLT2is acutely and directly (1) inhibit cardiac sodium transporters and alter ion homeostasis, (2) reduce inflammation and oxidative stress, (3) influence metabolism, and (4) improve cardiac function.
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Another new SGLT2i study with good results 
Full Paper:
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Importantly, mean follow up was only 12 months. Since CVD development is a slow process, I’d only expect those relative risks of heart failure to further diverge (and maybe even see some lowered comparative risks for stroke/MI in the SGLT2i group?) as time goes on. Hopefully they’ll continue to follow these cohorts to see if that’s true.
I wonder what the relative rate of genital infections in men vs women was in the SGLT2i group?
Yes - I have also wondered about this… I’ve never heard of men getting UTIs, so I suspect its almost all women. But if someone knows differently, please post.