Xenical Review
Xenical is a prescription diet pill, an effective diet pill, but unfortunately not without some inconvenience side effects.. Roche markets it in the UK, Canada and France. Its main ingredient is Orlistat, a.k.a. tetrahydrolipstatin. You may also find Orlistat as over-the-counter diet pills under name Alli, marketed by GlaxoSmithKline. Orlistat is a natural lipase inhibitor, meaning it makes fat intake difficult. It can make 30% of our daily fat intake indigestible. This fat inhibitory characteristic made Orlistat as an effective anti-obesity drug.
Users of Xenical can expect:
- Up to 30% of daily fat intake inhibition
- Lower blood cholesterol
- Reduced blood pressure
Xendos did an extensive research and came up that when applied for up to a year users have experienced of losing their previous body weight for over 10%. It is comparable to my top recommended diet pill, Proactol. I can say that both products match one another in term of fat loss potency. Both products can create consistent weight loss effects of 1 – 2 pounds/week, plus the bonuses of increased energy level and lower blood cholesterol.
Unfortunately, Xenical doesn’t come without grim side effects. And this factor alone, in my humble opinion, will render all of the above benefits useless.
Compared to Proactol (see my other post), Xenical has been proved able to reduce fat intake by 2% more than Proactol (Xenical 30%, Proactol 28%). However, is it worth the side effects?
Xenical, according to Xendos study, has the following side effects: oily spotting, abnormally low-level calcium in the blood (hypocalcaemia), frequent or urgent bowel movements, and uncontrolled flatulence. The latter is the most embarrassing we can say. The worst thing is 91% of Xenical users under the study experienced at least one of these sides and there’s no time scale on when these symptoms will diminish.
To minimize these side effects, the dietary fat content needs to be reduced to be about 15g per meal. Well, if we can reduce our fat intake like that, then we don’t really need any diet pills, right? It is stressful and lots of hard work. More like a conventional low fat diet plus additional flatulence. Surely you don’t want to use this for long.
Xenical is indeed beneficial to the body; studies on it have found that in about a year of Xenical treatment, up to 54% of test subjects lost up to 5% of their body weight, and about 24% loss for over 10%. But it comes with sacrifices.
As a prescription diet pill, only users with a BMI of over 30 can get Xenical. There’s a rule, in 12 weeks Xenical users must not lose their body weight for more than 5%, if this happen, physicians will recommend them to stop using Xenical.
I think it goes without saying that although Xenical does work pretty well (30% less fat intake); there are products that are far more superior available. One of them is Proactol (bind up to 28% daily fat intake). Unlike Xenical with its notorious sides, Proactol is a clinically proven effective diet pill with no known side effects, so it can offer you an easy and long-term weight loss.
Tags: Alli, anti-obesity, diet, diet pill, drug, lipase inhibitor, Orlistat, review, side effects, tetrahydrolipstatin, weight loss pill, xenical
This entry was posted on Thursday, April 1st, 2010 at 12:21 am and is filed under Diet Pill Reviews & Info. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.