Ir para conteúdo
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Clan GSM

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Lipofit Reviews: Does This Weight Loss Ingredients, Benefits?

Featured Replies

Postado

Why this review? (and why the confusion exists)

The name “Lipofit” (or “LipoFit”) has been adopted by multiple manufacturers across countries and product categories. That leads to big variation in what “Lipofit” actually is:

  • Powdered drink mixes sold as meal-replacement or satiety blends (ingredients like psyllium, green tea, garcinia, blood orange extract).

  • Capsules or tablets marketed as fat burners or slimming aids (formulations vary widely).

  • Topical gels and creams (firming/slimming gels with caffeine, L-carnitine, menthol).

  • Injectable “lipotropic” cocktails used in some weight-management clinics (choline, inositol, methionine, B vitamins).

  • Prescription medicines or brand names in pharmaceutical markets (e.g., “Lipofit F” as a branded combination of rosuvastatin + fenofibrate in some online drug directories).

Because of this fragmentation, any time you read a review or testimonial you must first confirm which Lipofit product is being discussed. Otherwise you risk mixing up experiences with completely different formulations.

Common ingredient families you’ll see under the Lipofit label

Across the non-prescription Lipofit products (drinks, capsules, gels) there are recurring ingredient themes — many seen across the weight-loss supplement market:

Fibers & bulking agents

  • Psyllium husk, maltodextrin, glucomannan — increase fullness, slow gastric emptying, reduce calorie intake when used before meals (satiety effect). These are common in powdered drink mixes.

Plant extracts claimed to reduce appetite or block absorption

  • Garcinia cambogia (contains hydroxycitric acid) — marketed to suppress appetite; clinical evidence is mixed and generally shows small, inconsistent effects.

  • White kidney bean extract — marketed as a “carb blocker” (alpha-amylase inhibitor) and included in some formulations.

Thermogenic and metabolism-targeting extracts

  • Green tea extract (EGCG) — modestly increases energy expenditure in some studies; also included for antioxidant benefits.

  • Fucoxanthin (from brown seaweed, used in some CLA/fucoxanthin blends) — included in some “advance” formulations claiming to support fat oxidation.

Fat-modifying lipids & related actives

  • Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) — included in some capsules; may have small effects on body composition in certain populations, but evidence is mixed.

Vitamins & supportive nutrients

  • Vitamin C, B vitamins, biotin — used for general health support or as “metabolism” co-factors in some products.

Topical actives (for gels)

  • Caffeine, L-carnitine, artichoke extract, menthol — applied topically with claims of localized fat reduction or skin tightening (scientifically, topical delivery achieving fat loss is unsupported; effects are mostly cosmetic and transient).

What claims do Lipofit products typically make?

Depending on the formulation and marketing, common claims include:

  • Reduced appetite and fewer cravings (via fibers or plant extracts).

  • Faster fat burning / boosted metabolism (via green tea, CLA, fucoxanthin).

  • Blocked carbohydrate absorption (white kidney bean).

  • Localized fat reduction or skin firming (topical gels).

  • Improved weight-loss results when combined with diet/exercise.

Crucial: while some ingredients have modest clinical support for small benefits, none are magic — and the strength of evidence varies ingredient-by-ingredient. Large, sustained weight loss is typically achieved through lifestyle change (calories in vs calories out), and supplements at best may provide a small additional effect when used correctly and safely.

Evidence: what the science actually says

When evaluating a multi-ingredient product like many Lipofit variants, you should judge each ingredient on its own:

  • Psyllium and other viscous fibers can produce clinically meaningful reductions in appetite and small improvements in weight when used as part of a calorie-controlled plan. The mechanisms are straightforward (increased satiety, slower gastric emptying).

  • Green tea (EGCG) has modest evidence for small increases in energy expenditure and fat oxidation, particularly when combined with caffeine; average effect sizes for weight are small.

  • Garcinia cambogia, white kidney bean, CLA, fucoxanthin — evidence is mixed or limited; some studies show minor benefits, others none. Many trials are small, short, or industry-funded, so interpret cautiously.

  • Topical slimming gels: there is little credible evidence that topical application causes fat cell loss; any visible “slimming” may be due to temporary water loss, skin tightening, or placebo effect.

Bottom line: ingredients found in some Lipofit products may help a bit for some people, but they are not substitutes for sustained dietary and activity changes. Evaluate claims critically and watch for selective use of clinical data in marketing.

The biggest safety and regulatory concern — hidden pharmaceuticals

This is the most important part of this review: regulatory agencies have flagged certain products sold under the LipoFit name (not necessarily all products called Lipofit) for containing undeclared pharmaceutical drugs.

  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a warning that LipoFit Turbo (a weight-loss product sold online) was found in laboratory testing to contain sibutramine, metformin, fluoxetine, and furosemide — none of which were listed on the product label. Sibutramine was withdrawn from many markets because it increases cardiovascular risk; furosemide is a potent diuretic; fluoxetine is an antidepressant; and metformin is a prescription diabetes medicine. The presence of such drugs in an over-the-counter weight-loss product is dangerous because consumers may have contraindications or interactions they are unaware of. The FDA advised consumers not to buy or use that product.

  • The FDA and other agencies regularly identify “medication health fraud” products: supplements sold for weight loss that are adulterated with prescription drugs, or analogues thereof. These products can cause severe adverse events — dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, cardiac arrhythmias, hypoglycemia/hyperglycemia, interactions with other drugs, and more.

Why this matters for anyone buying Lipofit: because the same brand name is used by different sellers, a product labeled “Lipofit” from a small online vendor may not be the same formulation as a Lipofit sold through an established pharmacy or a clinic. If a product is produced in an unregulated facility or sold via questionable channels, there’s a real risk of contamination or deliberate adulteration.

Real examples of Lipofit variants found online

To make this concrete, here are a few real variants I found while researching (again — these are different products):

  • NutriXlim Lipofit (passion fruit powder sachets): a powdered mix listing maltodextrin, psyllium husk, garcinia cambogia, white kidney bean, green tea extract, blood orange extract (Morosil). This is a fairly typical “meal-satiety” powder.

  • Lipofit Advance (capsule formula sold by some fitness/nutrition retailers): ingredient list includes CLA, wakame (fucoxanthin), sodium hyaluronate, vitamin C, acai, niacin, biotin — a different product targeted at body composition and skin support.

  • Lipofit F 160mg/10mg Tablet — not a supplement at all but a prescription-class combination (rosuvastatin + fenofibrate) listed on some drug catalogues; this is a medication for dyslipidemia and should only be used under medical supervision. This shows how the brand/name may also be used in pharma markets.

  • LipoFit Turbo — the FDA-flagged product found to contain undeclared prescription drugs. If you see a Lipofit product sold through sketchy marketplaces or pop-up social ads that claims rapid weight loss, treat it as suspect.

Because of this chaos in naming, always check the product label, seller credentials, and look for official distributor information or third-party testing before you buy.

Official website:- https://mylipofit.ca/

Participe da conversa

Você pode postar agora e se cadastrar mais tarde. Se você tem uma conta, faça o login para postar com sua conta.
Nota: Sua postagem exigirá aprovação do moderador antes de ficar visível.

Visitante
Responder

Quem Está Navegando 0

  • Nenhum usuário registrado visualizando esta página.

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.