Alli Weight-Loss Aid, Orlistat 60mg Capsules, 120-Count Refill Pack
3Alli Weight-Loss Aid, Orlistat 60mg Capsules, 120-Count Refill Pack
- Only FDA approved over-the- counter weight-loss aid
- Blocks absorption of 25% of consumed fat
- Undigested fat is excreted from the body instead of being turned into fat
- Alli users typically lose 50% more weight than people who use diet alone
alli is more than just a pill. It’s an innovative weight loss program that works with you, not for you. alli can help you lose 50% more weight than dieting alone, but you have to do your part by changing the way you eat and live to see results. Is the hard work worth it? Yes. With alli you can achieve gradual and healthy weight loss. If you do your part, alli can teach you smart eating and activity habits you can follow for a lifetime.
List Price: $ 69.99
Price: $ 41.65
BW
pretty good results,
I started Alli after a recommendation from my personal trainer. I was dieting and exercising but not having the results I wanted. I got on the Alli pill and saw a little reduction, but no continual weightloss. The pills were not providing me with the boost I’d expected. My trainer gave me another suggestion and had me try green coffee bean pills with svetol after having success himself. A few days after starting the svetol, I felt a serious boost in my results. Added in raspberry ketones a few weeks later and I was finally seeing the real pound reduction on the scale. Svetol Green Coffee Bean Extract Plus Capsules + FREE Raspberry Ketones Powder (Svetol GCBE (1 Bottles) + FREE Raspberry 25 Grams) – the best results have come from mixing the coffee bean extract, ketones, AND Alli together.
Rotating and taking certain pills on different days or at different times of the day help remove some tolerance concerns as well. I’m able to use all the supplements safely together and dropped a whopping 15 pounds in about 3 weeks and have been able to maintain that plus lose a couple more over the last few months. My overall energy levels are better too!
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calyx “calyx”
Two years on Orlistat,
I’ve been taking this product for two years now. It was prescribed by my doctor after I stopped smoking and gained quite a bit of weight. I lost 60 pounds but also dieted vigorously and exercised regularly at the gym on the treadmill for 35 minutes. Oily discharge sometimes? you bet, but only when I ate meals with a high fat content. Couple bits of advice: if you feel like you need to fart, don’t. You can’t be sure of what will come out. Restrain yourself until you get to a toilet, just in case. Also, not only fried chicken and fried food have fat. Any kind of red meat has fat content. Rule of thumb for me is if calories from fat are high, I take a pill with the meal. This product is a lifesaver but it only works with diet and exercise.
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KLK
Read the Fine Print,
I started taking Alli about two months ago to augment my diet and exercise program. I’m active, and with a BMI of 26, I just wanted to lose about 20 lbs that wasn’t coming off with my fairly intense cardio routine and low-fat diet. I would take Alli as directed with meals containing some fat but rarely more than the suggested amount of fat. And I did experience the treatment effects with meals within the suggested fat allotment: frequent, oily stools, random oily discharge (very gross), and stomach pain about 45 minutes after eating. However, they weren’t severe enough to make me stop taking the med. Over time, I didn’t lose an ounce but kept taking the pill as directed, hoping that it would kick in over time. It didn’t. And then I had a higher fat meal after taking one Alli pill. I know that the`treatment effects’ are supposed to act like aversion therapy, but this was ridiculous. I ended up in the ER with crippling, stabbing stomach pain and dry-heaving. I had such a bad reaction that stomach pumping was treatment of choice. The ER doc suggested I throw the pills out as soon as I got home.
After recovering from the ER ordeal and promptly pitching the bottle of Alli (the aversion therapy didn’t work to GlaxoSmithKline’s advantage this time), I did a little bit of research and found that I was not the only one with adverse reactions requiring medical care. This med has been linked to pancreatitis, gall stones, and possibly colon cancer (research was kind of spotty on this). Will everyone react this way to the drug? Of course not. Every med has side effects and not everyone can tolerate certain drugs. However, I hope that people will consider the risks and weigh the benefits before spending quite a bit of money on something that may not work.
Overall, I ended up with nasty side effects, a considerable ER bill, and no weight loss. And for those it does work for, you may become dependent on the drug for continued weight loss or even weight maintenance (this is from the actual website)- quite a price to pay to lose 2 to 3 more pounds more than you would have with diet and exercise alone. If Alli works for you, awesome- more power to you. But before you buy, please read the fine print- the pill may cost you a lot more than you bargained for.
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