The Diets Blog

Diet Pill

Diet pills - the not so healthy way to lose weight
Posted Monday, February 06, 2006 11:58:08 AM by Kate Grant

We'll start with the bad news. There is no magic diet pill that can help you reduce your weight. Diet pills, even the best diet pill in the world, sold either over the counter or by prescription, will not help you reduce one gram of fat, if you don't help it with a special diet and exercise. And these are the good news. Diet pills

For this you don't need a diet pill. Reading reviews regarding all sorts of diet pills like Cortislim diet Pill, Phendimetrazine diet pill, Didrex diet pill, or Adipex Diet Pill, and even the new diet pills, Hoodia or Fahrenheit, show us, that all those pills can be hazardous to your health and cause trouble.

Diet pills that are subscribed by doctors are diet drugs, and the other diet pills are considered supplements, that will not necessarily help you lose the weight.

There is a risk in taking those diet pills, especially cheap or discount diet pills bought on the web. So, if you really insist on taking a diet pill, ask your doctor for information, and don't just try any unsupervised pill that's out there, promising you the figure you want.

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Posted Thursday, December 28, 2006 12:51:43 PM by Blog57 Team
Other links for phentermine side phentermine risk effects danger articles, news, pills and buy phentermine online ir other pharmacy Cheapest Overseas Phentermine, Phentermine Fastin Sale, Diet Free Phentermine Pill Shipping. buy phentermine online nardil On delivery about phentermine is similar to smooth muscle relaxation or more. Ny victor tapson prudent medical management. It is what are taking any given to buy phentermine dose? Buy phentermine now, phentermine diet pill. It coaches fatty, more Phentermine Side Effects Dry mouth, sleeplessness, irritability, stomach upset or constipation may occur the first few days as your body adjusts to the medication. Do not take phentermine without first talking to your doctor if you are breast-feeding a baby....

Homeopathy: Out of the Shadows and into the Mainstream
Posted Wednesday, November 15, 2006 10:53:13 AM by Blog57 Team
"Homeopathy starts peeling off layers until you get to the core of the problem," says W. Todd Pierson, N.D., a naturopathic doctor who practices locally in Herrin and Murphysboro. "Instead of just treating symptoms, homeopathy goes much deeper into the human organism. With homeopathy, we are treating the whole person, the physical, emotional and spiritual aspects of the person."Today this natural treatment option is taking its place in the offices of healthcare providers, on the shelves of major retailers, in the homes of those who are seeking healthier lives and even in hospitals. In fact, in the federal government's 2004 National Health Information Survey, 3.6 percent of Americans reported using some form of homeopathic medicine; and more than 76 percent reported using complementary and alternative medicine.The Definition of HomeopathyHomeopathy - from the Greek words homoios (like) and pathos (suffering) - is a medical approach to treatment that respects the wisdom of the body....

Nutraquest gets OK to exit bankruptcy
Posted Thursday, November 09, 2006 7:00:58 AM by Blog57 Team
A judge has approved diet pill maker Nutraquest's plan to emerge from bankruptcy, three years after the company filed for protection from dozens of lawsuits related to its ephedra-based products. The reorganization plan calls for Manasquan-based Nutraquest, owner Robert Chinery and others to pay as much as $55 million to settle various legal actions, al though the actual amount paid is expected to be less. The company, formerly known as Cytodyne Technologies, sold ephedra-based Xenadrine RFA-1 diet pill and other supplements. The government banned sale of ephedra in 2004 amid a wave of al legations the herbal stimulant contributed to dozens of injuries and deaths. Personal injury and other lawsuits against diet pill manufactur ers forced many of them into bank ruptcy....

Germany won't subsidise diet pill by Sanofi-Aventis
Posted Monday, November 06, 2006 1:02:59 PM by Blog57 Team
Frankfurt and Geneva - A German plan to trim government healthcare spending may hit sales of anti-obesity drugs such as Sanofi-Aventis' new diet pill, Acomplia. At the same time, new EU rules are being negotiated that will restrict the health benefit claims food and drink companies can make about their products. A German panel earlier this month recommended that Acomplia be classified as a lifestyle drug, not one necessary to fight disease, which would mean state health insurance plans won't reimburse the drug's cost. The government has two months to consider the proposal. The recommendation is part of Germany's strategy to reduce medical expenses, echoing a new round of health spending cutbacks in several European countries. With obesity becoming a pandemic, some doctors say the proposal is short-sighted....

Promise In A Pill
Posted Sunday, November 05, 2006 10:54:34 PM by Blog57 Team
A new study by the University of Minnesota finds that more teens are using diet drugs. The research finds that 14-percent of high-school aged girls use the pills. That's nearly double the rate of just five years ago. The study also reveals that 63-percent exhibit unhealthy weight control behaviors. Kenna Shearman says, "Almost every girl that I am friends with or know has a problem with the way they look." That's why Kenna likes shopping at Be Yourself. "On the tag there is a color dot and it basically represent a size," she says. "I love that there are no sizes." Shearman says sizes can make teenage girls insecure. "Everyone just feels the pressure from media that you have to be skinny and tall so girls resort to stupid things." One of those things can be diet pills....

Red Wine Molecule Negates Adverse Effects of a High-Fat Diet, Prolongs Life of Lab Mice
Posted Thursday, November 02, 2006 10:59:06 PM by Blog57 Team
(PRWEB) November 2, 2006 -- If the results of a just-completed animal study can be applied to humans, it may be possible for humanity to avert the harmful effects of high-calorie/high fat diets that now plague modern societies. The discovery announced today in Nature Magazine could be a timely intervention for human populations that overeat and consume excessive amounts of fat and sugar. Furthermore, humanity just may be another step closer to proving it is on the threshold of discovering a molecule that may significantly extend human life, or what some call an anti-aging pill. ....

Obesity pill could treat diabetes
Posted Monday, October 30, 2006 2:58:07 PM by Blog57 Team
A new obesity pill that helps to control blood sugar levels could treat patients with type 2 diabetes, researchers say. They found that the Sanofi-Aventis drug Acomplia, which is also known as rimonabant, also reduced risk factors for heart disease in patients with type 2 diabetes who had not responded to standard treatments. ....

Curry powder could prevent cancer
Posted Friday, October 27, 2006 2:54:53 PM by Blog57 Team
Curry and onions might do much more than spice up a meal. They also could help prevent colon cancer. A study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology found that a pill containing large doses of curcumin (a chemical found in curry and turmeric) and quercetin, an antioxidant found in onions, helped prevent precancerous polyps in several people at high risk for colon cancer. ....

Veggies good for your mind, study says
Posted Tuesday, October 24, 2006 2:52:14 PM by Blog57 Team
Eating two or more servings of vegetables a day may slow a person's mental decline by about 40 percent compared with a person who consumes few vegetables, according to a six-year study of nearly 4,000 people age 65 or older. Consuming lots of fruit did not appear to offer the same mental protection, although fruit has been associated with a wide variety of other health benefits, said Martha Clare Morris, chief of Rush University Medical Center's Rush Center for Healthy Aging. The slowdown in the rate of cognitive decline experienced by people who ate 2.8 or more servings of vegetables a day is ``equivalent to about five years of younger age'' compared with people who ate less than one vegetable a day, Morris reports in today's issue of Neurology, (www.neurology.org), the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology....

One-a-day pill OK'd for Type 2 diabetes
Posted Saturday, October 21, 2006 10:51:51 AM by Blog57 Team
WASHINGTON -- The Food and Drug Administration yesterday approved a novel once-a-day pill to treat Type 2 diabetes that lowers blood sugar levels without causing weight gain. The FDA said the drug, called Januvia, is ``important" because 70 percent of diabetes patients cannot adequately control their blood sugar using existing treatments. Januvia is expected to become a billion-dollar blockbuster treatment for its maker, Merck & Co., and will be priced at $4.86 per tablet. Newly diagnosed patients can use the drug on its own, along with diet and exercise, to control blood sugar levels. And because it doesn't cause severe side effects when used in combination with popular diabetes drugs already on the market, Januvia also can be used by those whose disease is more advanced and requires more medicines....

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