What Is Alli?

The only FDA approved over the counter diet pill, Alli is based on the prescription ingredient Orlistat. The major difference is that they use half the dose of that found in prescription options such as Xenical. Alli works to block the body from absorbing a certain percentage of fat intake, and they claim it is largely for obese patients over 18 who are ready to change their lives, only being for a select group of people. The vote was closely split on the FDA approval board. They claim that you can lose weight. But considering all factors, that is debatable all things considered, and the fact that it has been used as a prescription obviously causes worry in terms of side effects. In all reality, FDA approval tells us that it was so dangerous they had to go through stringent requirements, not that it is going to be an amazing formula with safety included.
What Ingredients Were Used?
The only ingredient in Alli is Orlistat
Does Alli Work?
The problem is even though you would expect an FDA approved product to naturally be proven to work, the only studies conducted on Alli have shown a 5-10% reduction in weight in the space of a year. And for those that did lose even 10%, they tend to gain it back once the pill is stopped. It also requires you to basically adopt a no fat diet unless of course you want to experience side effects such as flatulence, oily anal discharge, orange spots, loose stool, diarrhea, frequent bowel movements, and hard to control bowel movements. For most dieters, this is not exactly the results they would look for.
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