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GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare declared that FDA approved
over-the-counter diet pill Alli will be available to the drug
stores until June 07, but Alli's maker GlaxoSmithKline is
taking the unprecedented step of opening a storefront in the
middle of Manhattan to advertise and instruct people about
the fat blocking diet pill.
Any adult whoever is suffering with over
weight can use Alli
diet pill. However, the manufacturer and its marketing
company are taking a different approach than that of the drug,
Xenical, which has double strength of Alli drug.
First, the educational promotions are being
forthright with information, such as the facts that there
is no "magic" diet pill, and that people who use
Alli must also make a concerted effort to eat a reduced-calorie,
low-fat diet, and exercise regularly.
If these efforts are made while using the
drug that manufacturer's claim only affects the gastrointestinal
system, then results will be seen.
The FDA noted that people using Alli drug
lost an additional two to three pounds for every five pounds
that were lost by dieting and exercising.
According to the manufacturer of Alli pills, it helps people
to lose 50 percent more weight than with diet & exercise
alone.
Alli goes on sale at your local drug store
without a prescription. It's not going to be the rapid weight
loss or a great quantity of weight loss that mostly people
would hope.
This diet pill has been prescribed pill
for obese patients but its success is limited.
You can take one pill three times a day with a meal.
Alli diet pill works in your intestines to block some of the
fat you eat from being wrapped up and digested. But if the
fat is not being rapt, it has to go somewhere else, and that
may leads to some uncomfortable side effects. Bloating and
gas and bowel pattern change, which is not very comfortable
in some people
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