Question by superduper: how many capsules of apidexin should you take a day?
i don’t understand if you’re suppose to take a total of 3 capsules a day, one 30-60 minutes before each meal of the day which are three meals a day or take 1 to 3 capsules before each meal making a possible total of up to 9 pills which sounds like way to much but i’d rather ask though
Best answer:
Answer by ClickMaster
You’re wasting your money and your hopes if you expect Apidexin to help you lose weight. Apedixin is just another concoction of chemicals which some people believe may help support fat loss. Of course if any of the ingredients were known to support fat loss, the major pharmaceutical companies (Big Pharma) would have their products on the market already. The reason they don’t is because the federal government regulations require they prove they work. That is not the case with supplements.
Supplement makes can put all sorts of junk in a capsule, tablet, powder, or liquid and tell you it will help you lose fat and do so with relative impunity. They have the freedom to market junk to people whereas food and drug providers don’t. So, what you’re taking is just a bunch of chemicals which the maker probably buys off-shore on the cheap with questionable purity, mixes them together in small quantities so it won’t do you any good but it won’t do you any harm either (they hate law suits), then package it in a cool looking bottle, market it with bloated and garish advertising, and sell to you for ten times their cost. In other words, it’s a scam.
It probably doesn’t matter how you take Apidexin because it not going to do anything anyway. Of course, if you believe strongly in the stuff, there may be some placebo effect.
Good luck and good health!!
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Doesn’t really matter.
Seaweed and raspberry extract. Really?
You know what you have to do.
Alli is the only over the counter weight loss pill approved by the FDA. There are only three prescription weight loss medications approved.
Do you think that if any of them REALLY worked we would have a $ 60 billion a year industry in “weight loss” supplements? People would be lined up without all the slick advertising.
The big three pharmaceuticals would dominate the market.
Approved or otherwise, none of these weight loss supplements guarantee anything unless you establish a healthy diet and exercise program.
So why not just establish a healthy diet and exercise program and keep your money?
You will be spending somewhere between $ 2 and $ 4 per day on a product that is not approved or guaranteed to do anything!
The only weight loss supplement I recommend is a basic multivitamin.
Good luck returning this junk.