Rapid Weight Loss Explained

by Amanda Gamdana on May 14, 2009 · weight loss

in weight loss

Body sculpting may be a new phrase but adjusting your body to suit your own idea of how it should look is nothing new, it is just some people can’t wait and try to rush the process. For these people, time is of the essence and it is not important how many corners they cut to achieve their goal. As a result, these people result to rapid weight loss practices and programs which may not be as effective as these people are led to believe they are.

Many health care officials are very skeptical about the claims made by manufacturers of quick weight loss systems. It has been shown that use of this type of weight loss invariably only works while the program is being followed but as soon as it stops it usually results in the person putting the weight back on, sometimes more.

People who undergo low carbohydrate or low calorie diets normally revert back to old eating habits simply because human beings can not actually live on with this type of diet scheme for the rest of their lives. Now research is showing that rapid weight loss is probably more attributable to body water loss and not body fat that the diet companies would have you believe.

I am sure you can see the problem with this being that any water that is lost can be replaced which is obviously disheartening for anyone that thinks they have lost weight. Despite these claims it is not very likely that a person a diet such as this would lose more than 2 pounds of body fat per week but there is a very real threat from problems associated with losing large amounts of water from the body.

Another rapid weight loss product out in the market is the slimming soap which they claim are made from a unique concoction of rare Chinese herbs and seaweed, which allegedly help to shed off body fats by emulsifying them upon application while taking a bath. This sounds really good except there isn’t any proof it works and the only results observed so far have been improvements in the users skin.

A more recent product to hit the weight loss market place promises much with increased energy and hunger suppression. But the claims do not stop there with improvements in the body’s ability to heal itself and reduce a number of pains; the magnetic earrings certainly do have a lot to live up to.

Apparently the magnetism in the earrings helps to keep the body’s own magnetic field synchronized and so the other benefits should be expected. It all sounds very scientific but to date no studies or research of any kind has been carried out or published in any medical journals.

Bottom line is no pain, no gain, if a person wants a beautiful body, they must work for it and as for those rapid weight loss products coming out on the market, if they sound too good to be true, they probably are.

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