XLS medical pro 7 does come with some considerations one must keep in mind to ensure we're taking this safely. It is stipulated that you should not take this pill under any circumstances if you:
You are pregnant or breastfeeding
Your BMI is less than 20
If you have taken a fat soluble vitamin or medicine (such as a contraceptive pill)
If you are allergic to any of the ingredients present.
It is also stipulated you consult your GP before taking if you are diabetic, if you are currently taking medication to lower cholesterol and if you have a deficiency of fat soluble vitamans (A, D, E and K).
Time to dig deep into what makes this fat burner tick and see if there's anything here that might help you to lose five times more weight than standard dieting alone.
Okranol
Okranol is a combination of Okra powder and inulin.
Okra powder is derived from the edible seed pods of the flowering plant Okra, often cultivated in Africa and South Asia. Okra is quite nutritional, though we're unaware of the dosage included in XLS medical pro 7 so it makes it difficult to say what you're actually going to get out of it. If dosed high enough, this nutritional value would help stave off potential issues brought about by a calorie deficit, such as nutritional deficiencies. It's also been found in some case to help control blood sugar, and though you'd think this would be a miracle then for anyone with diabetes, unfortunately it also contains an enzyme that limits the effectiveness of common medical treatments for the ailment.
Inulin is a prebiotic that sits in the bowel, unable to be digested, and promotes the growth of beneficial bacteria, helping to improve overall gut health. There has been some speculation into its usefulness with weight loss and it was found to have a small positive effect for short term weight loss. For weight control and long term weight loss, its usefulness is debated, with unclear results after testing long term in people who are overweight or obese. Again though, as we will repeat many times during this article, without knowing how it's being dosed it's unclear whether it's inclusion will be effective of not.
Crospovidone
Crospovidone is what is known as a Excipient:- essentially what this means is that it is an inactive ingredient typically used in pharmaceuticals to aid in the absorption of the active ingredients. How it does this specifically is with it's disintegrant properties, allowing the capsules to break up far more quickly, aiding in the faster absorption of the active ingredients upon contact with moisture. Honestly, this inclusion in the ingredients list is a bit of a stretch, as it, or other common disintegrants, are almost always included in capsules similar to this. It's usually buried in the full ingredients breakdown required on pharmaceuticals and to be fair to XLS here, seeing as it was quite difficult to find information for the ingredients, perhaps that's where it is supposed to be and the information that we found was just particularly thorough.
Citric acid
The inclusion of Citric Acid here is an interesting one, as if you simply google Citric Acid you'll find plenty of articles advocating for its use as a weight loss supplement. Many of these articles refer to the fact that it could be an effective appetite suppressant due to it being found to release serotonin in rats. Though it may have this effect at particular doses, what you'll find when you look deeper is that all the testing done on humans has either yielded insignificant results, or the results have been obfuscated by poor recording and reporting of body weight at all stages, simply implying an increase of weight loss has occurred. This would imply that Citric Acid has had minimal of not any impact on the weight loss of those in these studies, and we can conclude that, no matter the dosage, its inclusion is simply decoration to include in marketing and confusing filler the help convince people the pill might contain useful stuff.
Tricalcium Phosphate
This is a medical way to say "concentrated calcium" and it's inclusion here is frankly baffling. You could maybe reason that it's there to counterbalance a calorie deficient diet leading to a deficiency of calcium, supported by fact that we're likely to be consuming a lot less dairy when dieting, contributing in a calcium deficiency, but it's use as a weight loss tool is simply non existent. In fact, in all of our research the only possible use for weight loss found is that, as a potential side effect, when one consumes too much calcium, it may suppress ones appetite. Now that sounds pretty great! You just have to deal with the potential other side effects of Nausea/Vomiting, Dehydration, Constipation and Excessive Urination. Isn't weight loss fun?
Magnesium stearate
Magnesium Stearate has been used in the food industry for years as an emulsifier, binder, release, and antifoaming agent to name just a few of its uses. It's inclusion here has no effect on weight loss at all, and is simply added in as it helps to prevent the capsules from sticking to the machines that create them. The listed ingredients includes this simply as filler.