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Pain posts are high-intent because users may describe every abdominal symptom as a stomachache, while comments mix routine GI discomfort with gallbladder and pancreas fears. Right upper abdominal pain, severe abdominal pain, pain with vomiting, fever, yellowing skin or eyes, or pain that radiates to the back or shoulder deserves clinician attention. Track location, severity, duration, vomiting, fever, and food timing. GLP-1 users often have normal GI discomfort, but social feeds can blur the line between common symptoms and warning signs. A product page should not diagnose; it should help the user describe the signal clearly and escalate when appropriate. What to track: - Pain location, severity, start time, duration, and radiation to back or shoulder - Vomiting, fever, yellowing skin or eyes, dark urine, pale stool, and dizziness - Recent high-fat meal, rapid weight loss period, dose increase, and medication history - Whether pain is new, worsening, or different from prior nausea and bloating Community answer: - The correct community move is to stop guessing and help the user prepare a concise care note. - BodyM should separate routine nausea logs from serious-pain escalation prompts. - Pain location is data; vague reassurance is not. Safety boundary: Seek urgent medical guidance for severe or worsening abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, fever, jaundice, fainting, or pain that feels different from your normal pattern. Next action: Create a clinician handoff note with pain location, timing, dose history, and associated symptoms. Source context: - MedlinePlus: Gallstones - MedlinePlus: Nausea and vomiting - MedlinePlus: Semaglutide injection
BodyM helps you follow face, body, skin, hair, and clothing-fit changes alongside weight, protein, and weekly context.
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