Weight Loss Pills
Acomplia Diet Pill
A New Diet Pill for Weight Loss and Better Health, the Acomplia Diet Pill by
Michael Bens
Quite understandably - and quite rightly, in fact - diet pills used to have a
bad reputation. It's easy to see why - the diet pills of the sixties, seventies
and eighties were barbiturates - street name 'speed'. That's what they did -
they sped you up, increasing energy to an often frenetic level while cutting
your appetite. An overdose could be fatal, and even a mild overuse of these diet
pills could keep you 'going' for days and days - hardly the effect anyone was
going for! But yes, they did make people lose weight, sometimes quite a lot of
weight. All too often, though, any benefit that patients got from their weight
loss was more than counterbalanced by other health problems that the diet pills
themselves brought about.
The new generation of diet pills is much different. Nowadays, people are more
likely to take 'natural' diet pills that are make from herbal preparations, and
these are safer, for the most part, but not nearly as effective as the diet
pills of the past. Of course, there is (and probably always will be) a market
for them, because people love the idea of a quick fix - a pill to make you lose
weight!
One new diet pill is called "Acomplia" (generic name 'rimonabant'). It works by
blocking the brain's hunger receptors, so as a result, you feel less hungry or
don't realize that you are hungry. Depending on your precise behavior that
caused you to gain weight in the first place, this may or may not work for you.
Some of us eat too much because we make poor food choices in response to hunger.
Others, however, engage in emotional eating - eating when we're not even hungry
at all - for other emotional or psychological reasons. The diet pill may or may
not do much for your individual diet program. Studies indicate, however, that
this diet pill does help you lose weight to a certain extent. In a European
study, the subjects who took Acomplia lost twenty pounds as opposed to only 8 in
a control group who received a placebo or 'dummy' pill. This was a one-year
study that included 1,500 people, all of whom had weight to lose.
The manufacturers of this pill expected that it would have a positive effect on
weight loss. They - and the researchers - were surprised to find that it had
another benefit as well. This diet pill proved effective in lowering 'bad'
cholesterol (triglycerides) by 7%, and even more significantly, it raised 'good'
cholesterol (HDL) by 27%. This means that this pill, independent of its weight
loss benefits, it also an effective means of improving your cholesterol profile
and lowering your risk of heart disease and cardiovascular disease. Some of this
change in cholesterol level may have been due to the fact that Acomplia does
facilitate weight loss, and weight loss generally does improve one's cholesterol
profile. However, it does seem as though it would do so even if no substantial
weight loss is sustained.
Interestingly, this pill is also effective for other addictive behaviors, such
as smoking. It's not known why - as far as we know, its physical effects are
limited to the elimination of reduction of hunger. It seems as though there
might be link between these two compulsive behaviors - overeating and smoking -
though precisely what that link is is open to speculation at present Acomplia is
not yet available to the pubic, but it will be by next year. Ask your doctor
about it if you think it would be of benefit to you, and do some internet
research. So far, it seems very promising, and the side effects are virtually
non-existent. Time will tell, however, whether any concerns regarding this
product come up - it's still in the clinical trial stages.
The decision to rely entirely on a pill for weight loss is usually a misguided
one. Essentially, you have to do the work - you have to change your eating, and
start exercising - and there's no real substitute for that. That having been
said, however, it does seem as though this pill is an effective tool you can use
to help you on your way. Ask your doctor about Acomplia, particularly if your
cholesterol profile could use a bit of improvement!
Authored by Michael Bens. For more great information on weight loss, diets,
nutrition, and living a great healthy life style visit Gabae Weight Loss
For Your Free Weight Loss Guide, Visit
http://www.iLosingWeight.com.
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