Ephedra57 - Ephedrap57 diet pill review
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i just bought a bottle of ephedrap57 for 45 bucks on their website (when you leave the website without buying anything a link for 40% off comes up) and I'm excited to try it. Almost all the reviews I've read say it works great and for $45 I think it's worth it.
I would be skeptical about putting all that caffeine into my body that someone mentioned.
REPLY
I would be skeptical about putting all that caffeine into my body that someone mentioned.
REPLY
I really like it - I opted for the 3-bottle option & used all of them! I lost 15 lbs. over about 2 1/2 months. It IS really expensive if you buy it thru the main website (which I did) but after doing some research it looks like there are some other sites selling it much cheaper. It didn't seem too different from the store-bought variety other than the flashy packaging - and didn't seem to smell as nasty.
If I start the Vasopro with caffeine pills, who much of each would I take per day. And does that amount increase or stay the same.
I will never consider this product to loose my weight.Just because it is not approved by FDA.I will advise all of you who want to loose their weight Never use any product which is not approved by FDA.
“qaswer wrote:I will never consider this product to loose my weight.Just because it is not approved by FDA.I will advise all of you who want to loose their weight Never use any product which is not approved by FDA.”
I've personally not tried this product but isn't your statement a little naive? Do we need to start a thread on the FDA approved prescription drugs that had to be taken off the market because of the serious side-effects reported in a large number of users? How many FDA-approved drugs have/had class action suits against them? True a FDA-approved drug provides a certain level of comfort that a non-FDA approved drug provides, however, it would be naive to assume that FDA-approval is synonymous with safety. Not to mention the thousands of NON-FDA approved OTC drugs on the market that does not result in massive complications or death.
34 pounds in two months. am now 238lb... only another 21 to go! It works for me, two morning, one evening and LOTS of water.
FDA approval isn't everything.. they are looking at it as a dietary supplement, not a drug. If it was being evaluated as a drug, the side effects seen would most likley be acceptable, but as a food supplement it's too risky.
Be responsible, dont exceed the doses, check your blood pressure, take one initially and if you have side effects take no more!
It obviously doesn't work for everyone, but its the only one thats worked for me out of 5 different supplements tried.
P.S. You cant beat excercise, and limit your intake to the RDA.
FDA approval isn't everything.. they are looking at it as a dietary supplement, not a drug. If it was being evaluated as a drug, the side effects seen would most likley be acceptable, but as a food supplement it's too risky.
Be responsible, dont exceed the doses, check your blood pressure, take one initially and if you have side effects take no more!
It obviously doesn't work for everyone, but its the only one thats worked for me out of 5 different supplements tried.
P.S. You cant beat excercise, and limit your intake to the RDA.
I got Looking Trim P57 from an American site that looked really good and safe to me. After 3 bottles I never lost a pound and after 3 months I lost alot more then the high price I paid for them because someone in Florida, where the company was located was using my credit card details to pay for alot of things including hotels in florida, total lost was about £600 and that is because I noticed in time and contacted my bank to cancel my card.
I contacted the company, as it was the only one I ever used my card to to pay for something, told them someone used my card details and my money after I ordered this pills, no one ever replied to my e-mail and after sometime the site has gone missing, I cant find it so they have changed the website and maybe are still doing damage to people`s bank accounts but with a diferent name, so please be aware where you get this pills from and actually £75 is alot of money not even to lose a pound. They are rubbish, 100% rubbish trust me!
I contacted the company, as it was the only one I ever used my card to to pay for something, told them someone used my card details and my money after I ordered this pills, no one ever replied to my e-mail and after sometime the site has gone missing, I cant find it so they have changed the website and maybe are still doing damage to people`s bank accounts but with a diferent name, so please be aware where you get this pills from and actually £75 is alot of money not even to lose a pound. They are rubbish, 100% rubbish trust me!
Just thought I'd chime in about the caffeine argument. People see the "200 mg" of caffeine and think that it is alot, and that anyone using that amount is bombarding their bodies with it.
200 mg of caffeine is the equivalent of one cup of coffee. Migraine tablets like Excedrin Migraine have about as much. It is advised to watch your caffeine intake from other sources while taking any medication already containing caffeine.
I am, unfortunately a bit sensitive to caffeine and thus all the new Ephedra diet pills can make me feel jittery. Before the ban, caffeine wasn't used and hence I had great results.
I am still considering trying Ephedra57 and seeing if it works for me. I have already tried Lipodrene and HerbaleanER. Neither had any effect. If anyone has purchased several bottles of E57 and did not like it, I might be willing to pay you for a bottle so I can try it without getting hit with having to buy 6 bottles.
200 mg of caffeine is the equivalent of one cup of coffee. Migraine tablets like Excedrin Migraine have about as much. It is advised to watch your caffeine intake from other sources while taking any medication already containing caffeine.
I am, unfortunately a bit sensitive to caffeine and thus all the new Ephedra diet pills can make me feel jittery. Before the ban, caffeine wasn't used and hence I had great results.
I am still considering trying Ephedra57 and seeing if it works for me. I have already tried Lipodrene and HerbaleanER. Neither had any effect. If anyone has purchased several bottles of E57 and did not like it, I might be willing to pay you for a bottle so I can try it without getting hit with having to buy 6 bottles.
Im from England and I have been taking the pills during the week plus using the gym for 1 hr 5 times a week and i have lost 12lbs in 4 weeks !! I
“Anonymous wrote:I really like it - I opted for the 3-bottle option & used all of them! I lost 15 lbs. over about 2 1/2 months. It IS really expensive if you buy it thru the main website (which I did) but after doing some research it looks like there are some other sites selling it much cheaper. It didn't seem too different from the store-bought variety other than the flashy packaging - and didn't seem to smell as nasty.”
”
but dose it worklikethe original ephedra?
where did you find a bottle for 50 bucks every place i look is much higher than that.
“empress_pyrope wrote:Alright, honestly, I really like this stuff! I've been taking it for about 2 weeks now and I'm down 12 lbs! It gives you TONS of energy and pretty much eliminates your appetite. That was the really awesome part, because before, I would be completely ravenous by lunchtime, but now I can take it or leave it. Eating's not a big deal anymore.”
The only downside is your body gets used to the dosage and you feel you have to take more to get the same effect. I'd been taking 2 a day, but instead of taking more (which the bottle clearly states is dangerous), I'm going to stop for a week and cycle it back in. I can totally understand how people were dropping dead of heart attacks with this stuff; it makes you feel so good you don't want to go back to "normal" mode so you just pop a few more. I'd really rather not do that, though.And neither should anyone else.
But, bottom line, it's good stuff, and definately worth a try. Really $50 or so isn't bad for a diet pill; some in the store cost more than that.
From Wikipedia:
"On December 30, 2003, the FDA issued a press release recommending that consumers stop buying and using ephedra, and indicating its intention to ban the sale of ephedra-containing supplements.
Subsequently, on April 12, 2004, the FDA issued a final rule banning the sale of ephedra-containing dietary supplements. Tommy Thompson, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, stated that "...These products pose unacceptable health risks, and any consumers who are still using them should stop immediately."
Search Ephedra and Ephedrine on Wikipedia if you don't believe me.
Please be aware that just because you can get your hands on this stuff that it is legal or safe.
And if that doesn't sway you: Ephedrine can be used in the synthesis of methamphetamine - yes that's Meth folks. nice
"On December 30, 2003, the FDA issued a press release recommending that consumers stop buying and using ephedra, and indicating its intention to ban the sale of ephedra-containing supplements.
Subsequently, on April 12, 2004, the FDA issued a final rule banning the sale of ephedra-containing dietary supplements. Tommy Thompson, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, stated that "...These products pose unacceptable health risks, and any consumers who are still using them should stop immediately."
Search Ephedra and Ephedrine on Wikipedia if you don't believe me.
Please be aware that just because you can get your hands on this stuff that it is legal or safe.
And if that doesn't sway you: Ephedrine can be used in the synthesis of methamphetamine - yes that's Meth folks. nice
FDA and the manufacturer of fen-phen knew there was a possibility of pulmonary hypertension, although the FDA believed the risk was rare. Guess they where wrong.
Fen-phen, which included the drug Pondimin, was a controversial combination of appetite-suppressing drugs made popular in the 1990s.
Dr. Lutwak, a leading authority on obesity, helped evaluate the clinical data on fen-phen and a related drug marketed under the name Redux.
It wasn't long before he voiced concern about the drug's safety after analyzing reports that seemed to associate the medication with pulmonary hypertension and cardiac events.
Despite his evaluation that the potential health risks outweighed the benefits, Redux received approval from the FDA in 1996. It was withdrawn the next year after a Mayo Clinic report linked Redux and Pondimin with heart valve damage.
After reports of valvular heart disease and pulmonary hypertension, primarily in women who had been undergoing treatment with Fen-phen, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requested its withdrawal from the market in September 1997.
In July 1997, researchers at the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation reported 24 cases of rare valvular disease in women who took the Fen-phen combination therapy. The FDA alerted medical doctors that it had received nine additional reports of the same type, and requested all health care professionals to report any such cases to the agency’s MedWatch program, or to their respective pharmaceutical manufacturers.
The FDA subsequently received 66 additional reports of heart valve disease, all primarily associated with Fen-phen. There were also reports of documented heart-valve problems in patients taking only either fenfluramine or dexfenfluramine. The FDA requested that the manufacturers of fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine stress the potential risk to the heart in the drugs' labeling and in patient package inserts. As of 1997, the FDA was continuing to receive reports of cardiac valvular disease in persons who have taken these drugs. This valvular disease typically involves the aortic and mitral valves.
Fen-phen, which included the drug Pondimin, was a controversial combination of appetite-suppressing drugs made popular in the 1990s.
Dr. Lutwak, a leading authority on obesity, helped evaluate the clinical data on fen-phen and a related drug marketed under the name Redux.
It wasn't long before he voiced concern about the drug's safety after analyzing reports that seemed to associate the medication with pulmonary hypertension and cardiac events.
Despite his evaluation that the potential health risks outweighed the benefits, Redux received approval from the FDA in 1996. It was withdrawn the next year after a Mayo Clinic report linked Redux and Pondimin with heart valve damage.
After reports of valvular heart disease and pulmonary hypertension, primarily in women who had been undergoing treatment with Fen-phen, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requested its withdrawal from the market in September 1997.
In July 1997, researchers at the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation reported 24 cases of rare valvular disease in women who took the Fen-phen combination therapy. The FDA alerted medical doctors that it had received nine additional reports of the same type, and requested all health care professionals to report any such cases to the agency’s MedWatch program, or to their respective pharmaceutical manufacturers.
The FDA subsequently received 66 additional reports of heart valve disease, all primarily associated with Fen-phen. There were also reports of documented heart-valve problems in patients taking only either fenfluramine or dexfenfluramine. The FDA requested that the manufacturers of fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine stress the potential risk to the heart in the drugs' labeling and in patient package inserts. As of 1997, the FDA was continuing to receive reports of cardiac valvular disease in persons who have taken these drugs. This valvular disease typically involves the aortic and mitral valves.
Can someone tell me why it is necessary to buy the caffeine pill when using Vasopro? Why doesn't just drinking caffeing work with the Vasopro?
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