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May 12, 2026 Vol. I — Issue 02
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Glossary · Drugs & Medical Medical

What is Phentermine?

An older appetite-suppressant stimulant. Short-term use only; not a long-term weight-management drug.

Real Easy Diet · Glossary Desk 3-minute read
Term /11 P Drugs & Medical
Direct Answer

Phentermine is a prescription stimulant in the amphetamine family. It works as an appetite suppressant by triggering norepinephrine release in the brain. FDA-approved in 1959 and intended for short-term use only (typically 12 weeks or less). It's the most prescribed older weight-loss medication in the U.S., particularly in private weight-loss clinics.

Quick definition

Phentermine is typically dosed 8 mg, 15 mg, 30 mg, or 37.5 mg per day. Generic, cheap (around $10 to $30 per month), and often the first prescription weight-loss tool a primary-care doctor will offer.

How it actually works

As a sympathomimetic amine, phentermine stimulates the central nervous system, increasing norepinephrine in the hypothalamus and dampening hunger signals. The mechanism is structurally similar to amphetamine — the side effects (jitteriness, insomnia, elevated blood pressure, elevated heart rate, dry mouth) reflect that family resemblance.

Clinical-trial data: average weight loss runs 3 to 7 percent of bodyweight over 3 to 6 months. The combination drug Qsymia (phentermine + topiramate) produces larger losses — about 9 to 11 percent — but at higher side-effect cost.

The 12-week label limit is the result of concerns about cardiovascular risk, dependence potential, and tolerance. In practice many clinics prescribe it longer, often on rotating cycles (12 weeks on, 4 weeks off).

Why it matters for weight loss

Phentermine is a real tool for people who can't access or tolerate GLP-1 agonists. It's much cheaper. The trade-off is the side-effect profile (it feels like coffee turned up to 11) and the short-term use limit.

Common misconceptions

The biggest myth: phentermine is just "a strong appetite suppressant." It's a stimulant in the amphetamine family. It's controlled (DEA Schedule IV) and has real cardiovascular and dependence risks. Not for people with hypertension, heart disease, or anxiety disorders.

The second myth: you can stay on it forever. The body habituates within weeks to months, the appetite-suppression effect fades, and side effects accumulate. It's a bridge, not a destination.

Sources

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