The herb is called Irvingia Gabonensis.
This study was published in the journal Lipids in Health and Disease. [1] Researchers recruited both overweight and obese people to participate in the study. They were divided into two groups.
The first group supplemented with 150mg of Irvingia twice a day.The second group was given a placebo.
Here's the cool part: Both groups maintained the SAME diet and amount of physical exercise.
The study lasted ten weeks and at the start of the study, researchers measured starting body weight and the following BASELINE blood levels:
1. Total Cholesterol (both LDL and HDL)
2. Fasting Glucose
3. Leptin
4. Adiponectin
5. C-reactive protein
So what happened?
The group taking the Irvingia supplement twice a day lost 28 pounds of body weight!
The placebo group only lost 1 measly pound.
And hang onto your hat... because the Irvingia group's ending blood tests were just as amazing.
Fasting glucose DROPPED by a whopping 22%... total cholesterol DOWN 26%... LDL ("bad") cholesterol REDUCED by 27%...C-reactive protein PLUMMETED by 52%.
All in less than 3 months! That's pretty incredible for a single herb.
More human studies need to be done, to be sure. But so far, it looks very promising.
For example, another study investigated the effect of Irvingia on rats that were made to have diabetes. One single oral dose of Irvingia lowered the rats' plasma glucose just two hours after it was administered. [2]
And yet another double-blind human study recruited forty participants. Again, they were divided into two groups. One received Irvingia while the other received a placebo. Both groups maintained their normal caloric intake.
After just 30 days, the Irvingia group lost a whopping 12.3 pounds. And just like in the other human study I told you about, the Irvingia group had SIGNIFICANT reductions in total cholesterol, LDL and triglycerides. [3]
You can most likely find Irvingia extract at your local heath food store. I'd suggest taking the amount used in the first study I mentioned, which is 150mg, twice daily.
[1]Judith L Ngondi, et al. The use of a Cissus quadrangularis/Irvingia gabonensis combination in the management of weight loss: a double-blind placebo-controlled study. Lipids in Health and Disease 2008, 7:12
[2] Ngondi JL, Djiotsa EJ, Fossouo Z, Oben J. Hypoglycaemic effect of the methanol extract of irvingia gabonensis seeds on streptozotocin diabetic rats. Afr J Trad CAM. 2006 3:74–7.
[3] Judith L Ngondi, Julius E Oben* and Samuel R Minka. The effect of Irvingia gabonensis seeds on body weight and blood lipids of obese subjects in Cameroon. Lipids in Health and Disease 2005, 4:12 doi:10.1186/1476-511X-4-12
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