# Antiemetic effect of acupressure wristbands for GLP-1 medication associated nausea

**Authors:** Florencia Ziemke, Soufiane Belarj, Jem Esguerra, Anita Reyes, Nawfal Istfan

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.obpill.2025.100178 · Obesity Pillars · 2025-05-08

## TL;DR

This study explores whether acupressure wristbands can help reduce nausea caused by GLP-1 medications, finding that they offer a drug-free and effective option for many users.

## Contribution

The study is the first to investigate acupressure wristbands as a treatment for nausea caused by GLP-1 receptor agonists.

## Key findings

- Acupressure wristbands provided nausea relief in over 80% of episodes.
- Nausea relief was often achieved within 5 minutes in a third of episodes.
- The wristbands were used consistently and safely without medication adjustments.

## Abstract

Nausea is one of the most reported side effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1a). Current recommendations fall short in taming the symptoms, include antiemetic medication, behavior changes, GLP-1a dose adjustment, and often cause a disruption to treatment. Sea-Band® is a drug-free, class II FDA-cleared medical device for relief of nausea in motion sickness, morning sickness, chemotherapy and anesthesia induced nausea. The device is a set of soft, elastic, reusable acupressure wristbands (ACW) with a skin-facing plastic button worn below the wrist crease applying pressure at acupoint pericardium 6. We hypothesized that ACW was an effective tool for GLP-1a associated nausea.

This was a one-arm, open-label, non-randomized, prospective interventional study evaluating the antiemetic effect of ACW in non-pregnant adults on GLP-1as with nausea. GLP-1a were semaglutide or tirzepatide. Exclusion criteria were patients on GLP-1a without nausea, recent use of antiemetic medications, other nausea-related conditions, history of gastroparesis, and uncontrolled gastroesophageal reflux disease. Patients were shown how to properly place and use ACW at the onset of nausea and were followed weekly for 4 weeks. Follow-ups assessed frequency of nausea, ACW use frequency and duration, and change in nausea.

359 episodes of nausea were recorded amongst 31 adult participants over 4 weeks. Adults, mean age 55, mean BMI 34, mean HbA1c 5.9 %, reported nausea over 80 % of the time on a weekly basis. ACW were used in all recorded episodes of nausea. Medication doses were kept stable throughout the duration of this study. Nausea relief was achieved within 5 min in one third of episodes, and in over 5 min but under 20 min in the remainder of the episodes. A logistic regression model was used to evaluate the likelihood of nausea relief. A consistent rate of nausea relief over 80 % was observed during the study period, adjusting for the correlation between reduced nausea episodes and reduced episodes.

Although not a controlled trial, this pilot, proof of concept, pragmatic study suggests that ACW may offer a safe, self-administered, reusable, and drug-free option for managing GLP-1a associated nausea.ACW’s nausea reducing effect was seen in over 80 % of episodes, and remained consistent throughout the study period. One third of participants experienced relief within 5 min of wearing ACW in the first three weeks. Given the relatively small sample size of the population, further large-scale investigations are justified. Nausea is common in day-to-day real-world use of GLP-1as, and our results suggest that using ACW may provide a first-line therapeutic intervention used ad libitum to tame a disruptive symptom, improve day-to-day well-being, and positively impact a person’s treatment journey on GLP-1a.

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## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** semaglutide (PubChem CID 56843331), tirzepatide (PubChem CID 163285897)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** GLP1R (glucagon like peptide 1 receptor) [NCBI Gene 2740] {aka GLP-1, GLP-1-R, GLP-1R}
- **Diseases:** morning sickness (MESH:D048968), gastroesophageal reflux disease (MESH:D005764), Nausea (MESH:D009325), gastroparesis (MESH:D018589), disruptive symptom (MESH:D019958), motion sickness (MESH:D009041)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137197/full.md

## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137197/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12137197