Looking around ebay, I decided to enter in a random ID number and got some auction that was trying to get you to bid on some Miracle pills that “melt the fat away”.
L-Carnitine
Choline Bitartrate
Inositol
Betaine
Methionine
Chromium Picolinate
Citrus Fiber
Magnesium Sterate
Are the listed ingredients in the tablets and I’m wondering if this guy is legit (but I don’t plan on buying them anyways as I can’t stand to lose anymore weight)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=1757938015 Thats his aution. Not to mention hes a real prick to anyone who leaves him anything but positive feedback.
Nobody has any clue?
(Opens box of clues)
It’s diffucult to say how compounds will affect us without some kind of experimental or historical data. For example, would you willingly comsume sodium chloride if all you knew about it was that it is made of a poisonous metal and a poisonous gas?
If there is no supporting clinical data for these fat-burner pills, that alone is telling us something. I didn’t want to check every single one of the listed ingredients, but I doubt you will find any good cites that don’t have something to sell you. This first one caught my eye:
Sloppily worded- I assume they mean it helps move fatty acid chains into the muscle cells for metabolization into energy. But what is the point of turning fat into energy if you’re not active enough to use said energy? And if you are active enough to be able to use all of this freshly metabolized raw energy, then why do you need the pills?
Here’s a site that says:
Another link.
I tried without success to find a news article I saw about 2 weeks ago. There has been a recent upsurge in heat related football practice deaths and the use of Carnitine, etc. is suspected. (Deaths had fallen dramatically once the coaches were finally convinced that drinking water in practice is a good thing. But going back up again.)