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Weight loss pills work? (Read 348 times)
cute-but-chunky
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Weight loss pills work?
08/16/07 at 10:41:36
 
Hello all!
Do weight loss pills really work? Stuff like phentermine and adipex? Just wondering if anyone has some positive experiences with using medications to help with their weight loss. I just wonder if it is a lot of hype or if they really do work. I don't think that ANY pill will work solely using a pill to lose weight - I'm sure exercise and dieting must enter in as well - but then if that be the case then why use a diet pill? If a person has the will power to follow a diet and to exercise as well then is the diet pill just a phycological help, like a placebo? I dunno.  Roll Eyes
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #1 - 08/16/07 at 10:54:20
 
Hey thanks for joining the forum! Please visit often.

Well to answer you about weight loss pills, let me suggest that you to click here: phentermine

Phentermine is one of the best selling weight loss medications consumed in the USA.
According to the site of the link I suggested to you, phentermine and other weight loss medications help a person trying to loss weight by decreasing your appetite for food - thus suppossedly making a reduced calorie diet far easier to follow than unaided by the medication.

My personal thought is if you have a strong enough will to resist hunger pains then don't consider a diet medication. Smiley
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« Last Edit: 02/17/10 at 12:09:48 by YaBB Administrator »  

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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #2 - 08/27/07 at 17:25:19
 
Hey I was doing really good at mentally controlling my hunger pains until I saw this flash video about waffles:
http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/waffles
I'm destined to buy some weight loss medication now for sure - after that my hunger is way outta control!  Grin
Ok sorry everyone - good to goof around a bit sometimes.
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #3 - 09/28/07 at 06:20:55
 
hmm, you could try Acomplia. that's what i'm using right now and it works just fine. no nasty side effects and i'm seeing some good results. you might want to read about it first though, so i suggest you read about it here on this info page for Acomplia weight loss pills.
i hope it helps. let me know how it goes if you do get it.
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cute-but-chunky
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #4 - 09/28/07 at 13:44:18
 
Hey thanks nacerdi!
I have heard of acomplia. I heard that the US food and drug administration didn't approve it for sale in the USA. Can a person order acomplia from inside the US from another country and still have it delivered to their door without troubles from law enforcement?
It bothers me that acomplia/rimonabant was not approved in the US - especially when in Europe and other countries like Canada have approved it and have found incredible safety and effectiveness with this new medication.
I bet if someone inside the US invented the medication it would long be approved.

Here is an article I found about it:
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_52/b3914072_mz054.htm
The End Of Obesity As We Know It
Sanofi-Aventis' Acomplia promises that and more. But approval isn't a slam dunk

Ever wonder why marijuana smokers get the munchies? So did a team of scientists at Sanofi Recherche lab in Montpelier, France. Fifteen years ago they began investigating marijuana's effects on the brain, including the well-known fact that cannabis makes users hungry. "We set out to try and create an anti-marijuana," a drug that could suppress appetite by blocking the same switch in the brain activated by cannabis, says Gérard Le Fur, senior executive vice-president and board member at newly merged French pharmaceutical giant Sanofi-Aventis.
They succeeded beyond their wildest dreams, discovering a medicine that not only helps people lose weight but also shrinks abdominal fat, helps people stop smoking, improves cholesterol levels, and helps patients better regulate blood sugar.

Talk about a potential blockbuster. Initially, though, Sanofi will take it slow. It will seek approval of the drug, Acomplia, in Europe and the U.S. by the second quarter of 2005 as a treatment for just two of the conditions: obesity and tobacco addiction. Because patients in Acomplia trials regained weight after stopping treatment, the company hopes regulators will approve it for long-term use.

Researchers say side effects such as nausea and depression are relatively minor and short-lived. But as the first in an entirely new class of drugs that affect a pleasure center in the brain, even the slightest hint of psychiatric side effects may lead regulators to demand more long-term safety data, potentially delaying Acomplia's launch beyond 2006 as planned. Still, Sanofi-Aventis is confident that the drug's impressive efficacy will assuage any such worries. "It's a product that takes aim at two of the great maladies of the century," says Sanofi-Aventis CEO Jean-François Dehecq.

DEPRESSION QUESTION
Acomplia is the first in a new class of compounds under development to block receptors found in the brain and in fat tissue known as cannabinoid type 1 (CB1). These receptors control hunger and tobacco addiction. Chronic overeating and smoking sends them into overdrive. Blocking the CB1 receptors dramatically reduces such cravings. Results of a two-year clinical trial in the U.S. showed patients given Acomplia lost an average of 19 pounds, compared with five pounds for patients given a placebo. Those on Acomplia also reported higher levels of HDL, the good cholesterol, lower levels of triglycerides, and improved sensitivity to insulin. All are important in keeping heart disease at bay. "This could be a paradigm-shifting drug," says Dr. Louis J. Aronne, president of the North American Society for the Study of Obesity.

The market potential is huge. More than a third of Americans are clinically obese, or 30% above their ideal body weight. And it's not just an American phenomenon. Dr. Gbola Amusa, senior research analyst for Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in London, estimates that as much as 10% of health-care costs in other industrialized countries are related to being overweight. The two leading obesity drugs, Xenical and Meridia, have unpleasant side effects such as diarrhea or high blood pressure, so analysts think Acomplia will quickly win market share if approved. Amusa estimates sales will reach $5.6 billion a year by the end of the decade.

Accomplia's real potential may go well beyond eating and smoking. The company hopes it will also become the first drug approved for the treatment of metabolic syndrome, a combination of abdominal fat, high blood pressure, high blood-fat levels, low levels of HDL cholesterol, and high blood-sugar levels, all of which contribute to cardiovascular disease. "This is not just a diet drug but a significant advancement in cardiovascular treatment," says Amusa.

Still, there is reason for caution. There was a noticeable rate of withdrawal in Acomplia's clinical trials due to depression. Researchers involved in the trials say that might be because people taking the drug went in with unrealistic weight-loss expectations or were more susceptible to depression to begin with.

Either way, there are no long-term studies yet of the effects of interfering with this part of the brain. And given the increased regulatory scrutiny on new drugs after the Vioxx and antidepressant controversies, the company may find it needs to submit more data than anticipated to secure approval. Is Acomplia too good to be true? "There has never been a diet drug approved that has had more benefits than risks," says Dr. Larry D. Sasich of Public Citizen's health research group in Washington. Dehecq and Le Fur are determined to prove doubters like him wrong.

By Kerry Capell in London, with Carol Matlack in Paris
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cute-but-chunky
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #5 - 09/28/07 at 13:45:41
 
By the way nacerdi be sure to let me know if I can order Acomplia from the US!  Smiley
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #6 - 09/28/07 at 15:40:20
 
Hey all! Sam X-Captain on this part of the forum http://drug-network.com/yabb/YaBB.pl?num=1189455853/3#3
hooked me up with these guys: Licensed-Meds !!! They've been awesome to me. They certainly ship to the USA and they also have BOTH phentermine and acomplia!
To answer cute-but-chunky, I don't think ordering hardly any medications online is entirely legal in most states, BUT when visiting the doctor costs a fortune and the medications are humiliating to buy at the drugstore sometimes the risk is worth taking - also its kind of against our rights and freedoms as Americans to not be able to possess a substance like Acomplia - especially when it would improve life and health for so many.
Also nacerdi the pharmacy you suggested do they ship to the US? Be good for all of us to know.
I think that when a medication will improve the life, well being and overall health of a person it is a real crime to outlaw it, to not approve it (such as the FDA always does) or make it virtually unavailable to those who need it.
I feel that ordering from online pharmacies is a form of civil disobedience and an exercise of our rights of a free people.
Officials need to get up to date with times, people who have experienced the freedom and lack of embarrassment of ordering medications online are very unlikely to ever go back to regular pharmacies.
So to end my rant, start thinking like a free person.

BTW! These guys are great as well!

Trust-Pharm!!
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« Last Edit: 02/17/10 at 12:11:35 by YaBB Administrator »  
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #7 - 10/09/07 at 18:06:04
 
Drugs are dangerous you guys! Why don't you stop overeating and get some exercise instead of posting on this forum? It makes no sense to me as to why you would go way out of your way to buy drugs to lose weight when you can lose weight completely drug free. Why?
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #8 - 02/12/08 at 20:34:13
 
Hey this is real interesting. I'm a teenager and was thinking that maybe I should get approved for weight loss medication like phentermine because I heard its a health risk - a far more serious health risk than taking medications I hear. Is that true? Or maybe cause I'm still so young I might grow out of it? I hope I just don't outgrow my pants  Embarrassed
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #9 - 02/29/08 at 12:32:21
 
Yes weight loss pills really work alright. Something else to try though is drink a cup of green tea any time you are feeling hungry and it helps a lot too for controlling your appetite. I bet if you used phentermine and green tea you'd really lose appetite, not sure though, ask Doctor, don't want someone to die doing that.
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #10 - 09/30/09 at 09:36:36
 
Seems Phentemine 37.5 is the recommended weight loss pill currently. As its a natural pill, this would be safe to consume. But take this medication only for the duration specified.
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #11 - 03/03/10 at 15:10:34
 
Great information! Thanks Guys!
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Re: Weight loss pills work?
Reply #12 - 03/15/10 at 11:41:48
 
Weight loss pills work alright, but what they don't tell you about is that drugs always have negative side effects - always! Phentermine does work thats for sure but its a strange medication in the sense that it tells your mind that its not hungry, its a psychological drug.
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