Anorex/Leptoprin diet pills -- really expensive speed, or what?

The other night I caught a commercial for Leptoprin, a.k.a. Anorex, a new diet pill that was advertised for $153 a bottle.

Richard Roeper did a recent column devoted primarily to how tacky the name (Anorex) is, but my interest is more GQ than BBQP. Roeper cites the ingredients as

So is this just another kind of speed, or how exactly is Anorex supposed to work? And is there anything in it, besides a reverse-psychology marketing ploy, makes this stuff (theoretically) worth $153/bottle?

(Regardless, I’m not interested in ordering it. No worries on that account.)

Looks pretty suspect to me, at least. The ephedrine alkaloids are probably a stimulant (if “alkaloid” doesn’t mean it is completely different from ephedrine), but the other things: aspirin and caffeine? Calcium, Vitamin B6? Tea? Cayenne? I could go to the grocery store and put together a HUGE pot of this stuff for about $15.

Well, ok, it looks to be a collection of a bunch of different substances that increase metabolism or lead to certain body chemical productions. L-Tyrosine (2), Green Tea, etc. And Ma Huang extract is ephedrine, which of course seems to be fairly dangerous.

Even with this big collection of stuff, I don’t know if it should be that expensive, but I guess most of this stuff is.

None of that stuff is worth anything. The only “diet” effect will be from the ephedrine, and you can buy much cheaper ephedrine pills if thats what you want. (But be sure to read up on the risks of ephedrine/ephedra/ma huang first).

Scam.