Walter Hinchman is the CEO and Co-Founder of Swolverine, where performance nutrition is engineered, not marketed.
He is also the CEO and Co-Founder of WLTR, the world’s first patented data validation algorithm, redefining how truth, accuracy, and trust are enforced at scale.
His writing reflects the same philosophy behind both companies—standards aren’t suggested. They’re set.
Tesofensine isn’t your typical fat burner. Originally developed to treat neurodegenerative conditions like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, this compound showed a surprising “side effect” during early clinical trials: rapid and sustained weight loss.
Unlike caffeine-based thermogenics or GLP-1 agonists, Tesofensine works through a completely different mechanism. It alters brain chemistry by inhibiting the reuptake of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin — the same neurotransmitters that regulate appetite, reward, mood, and energy. The result? Strong appetite suppression, better compliance in calorie deficits, and even potential benefits for body composition and motivation.
→ How Tesofensine works
→ Clinical data on its fat loss and appetite suppression effects
→ Ideal dosage protocols and side effect considerations
→ How it compares to other fat loss agents
→ Supplement and peptide stacks that can enhance its effects for recomp goals
Walter Hinchman is the CEO and Co-Founder of Swolverine, where performance nutrition is engineered, not marketed.
He is also the CEO and Co-Founder of WLTR, the world’s first patented data validation algorithm, redefining how truth, accuracy, and trust are enforced at scale.
His writing reflects the same philosophy behind both companies—standards aren’t suggested. They’re set.
Tesofensine isn’t your typical fat burner. Originally developed to treat neurodegenerative conditions like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, this compound showed a surprising “side effect” during early clinical trials: rapid and sustained weight loss.
Unlike caffeine-based thermogenics or GLP-1 agonists, Tesofensine works through a completely different mechanism. It alters brain chemistry by inhibiting the reuptake of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin — the same neurotransmitters that regulate appetite, reward, mood, and energy. The result? Strong appetite suppression, better compliance in calorie deficits, and even potential benefits for body composition and motivation.
→ How Tesofensine works
→ Clinical data on its fat loss and appetite suppression effects
→ Ideal dosage protocols and side effect considerations
→ How it compares to other fat loss agents
→ Supplement and peptide stacks that can enhance its effects for recomp goals
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