Appetite Be Gone with Hoodia Gordonii Appetite Suppressant
Possibly the safest most effective and powerful appetite suppressant
in history.
Hoodia Gordonii's revolutionary properties will take the multi-billion
dollar diet industry by storm, after much research by South African
scientists and western pharmaceutical companies have proven that
Hoodia has no known side effects and no stimulants.
Hoodia Gordonii grows in the high deserts of the Kalahari Desert
region of South Africa where temperatures reach as high as 50 degrees
Celsius. Although there are other species of Hoodia, the Gordonii
is the only one that contains the all-natural appetite suppressant.
South African scientists have been testing the Hoodia plant since
1996 when they discovered the plant contained a previously unknown
molecule, dubbed P57 by Britain's leading pharmaceutical researcher,
replicates the effect glucose has on nerve cells in the brain fooling
the body into thinking it is full, even when it is not. Hoodia's
appetite suppressing molecule is said to be almost 10,000 times
stronger than glucose.
Pharmaceutical giant Phytopharm is rushing to produce a drug for
the weight loss industry in the next few years, but pure Hoodia
Gordonii works incredibly well in its natural form.

Results of human clinical trials in Britain suggest that P57 could
reduce the appetite by up to 2,000 calories a day.
The San (Kung) Bushmen can trace their heritage back more than 27,000
years based on rock paintings and are one of the world's oldest
and most primitive tribes, and they have known about the properties
of Hoodia Gordonii for thousands of years.
In an interview with ABCNEWS, a spokesman for the San people who
live in the Kalahari Desert, Andries Steenkamp says, "I learned
how to eat it from my forefathers," as he prepared a piece
of the cactus-like plant called hoodia by trimming off the prickly
spikes. "It is my food, my water, and also a medicine for me."
"Hoodia stops hunger and also treats sickness," Steenkamp
told ABCNEWS. "We San, use the plant during hunting to fight
off the pain of hunger and thirst."
World Health Organization reports that Globesity is rapidly becoming
the biggest threat to westerner's health. According to the WHO,
more than 1 billion people are overweight with 300 million of those
clinically or morbidly obese (double their normal weight). The medical
community reports excessive weight gain is directly related to severe
medical problems including heart disease, diabetes, cancer and the
onset of strokes.
Reports say that over the next 5 years, deaths related to obesity
will increase by 20% in keeping with a reported 20% increase in
plus-size coffin sales over the last 5 years in the USA.
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