Orovo Diet Pills: a Critical Look at the Anti Aging Miracle

Orovo diet pills are marketed as not only fat burner, but also promise to reduce wrinkles and fine lines. They seem to be the ultimate product to look young and lose weight, helping dieters look and feel great as they discover the fountain of youth. Orovo
diet pills
contain a number of ingredients that have been identified as 'super foods' and are promoted as a natural weight loss products with miraculous effects. But what makes these pills so unique, and are they really as effective or even safe as they company claims?

Orovo Diet Pills: The Basics
Orovo diet pills heavily rely on the now-popular topic of superfoods that can combat the signs of aging and promote good health. The company suggests that the high level of antioxdants, DMAE, green tea, and other key ingredients in Orovo pills can help promote weight loss and reduce wrinkles, acne, and other problems associated with aging.

Key Ingredients in Orovo Diet Pills
Orovo diet pills contain extracts of: Barley juice powder, acai, cayenne pepper, buckwheat pepper, flaxseed powder, alfalfa sprout extract, green tea (50% caffeine), DMAE, Alpha Lipoic Acid, and Idebenone amongst others.

The proprietary blend is what makes Orovo stand apart from other diet pills on the market. However, the entire marketing message rests on the theory of superfoods, and the Orovo.com website quotes dozens of medical journal excerpts to support its claims. The only problem is, these reports support the actual ingredients such as Flaxseed, Acai, Cayenne Pepper, and Soy. This information ahs been available for years for the individual ingredients, but there are no reports or clinical studies available regarding the actual use of Orovo diet pills.

Despite the giant list of medical journal excerpts supporting the benefits of each superfood, there is no evidence to suggest that Orovo diet pills themselves offer the same benefit. Orovo diet pills have not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, and there is no indication that the pills are safe for all people.

 
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I have been on Orovo fro several months and have had the opportunity to try various products. I have seen great results. This is no miricle pill, you still need to eat rght and exercise. But i have gotten BETTR results than just eating right and exercising alone. Please feel free to shot me an email reguarding any questiosn or concerns you might have and might be able to point you in the right direction reguarding Orovo products. Live Healthy! adam life.chocie@live.com

Posted on 03/18/2009 at 8:03:05 PM

I was so keen to lose weight - about 10 -12 lbs. Menopausal wight gain is so hard to control. I find the size of the pills and the quantity of 6 7DFB and 4 OROVO DETOX a little hard to swallow. I have been drinking lots of water and yet I feel no effects whatsoever, weight loss - no. Skin improvement - no. energy level increase - no. Its been just a week but I'm getting worried, despite eating carefully as well as 'pills', I have put on weight - 3lbs from 1day to next. The bathroom visits are not the issue I thought they were going to be - this I expected from a Detox pill. What is going wrong??

Posted on 03/11/2009 at 10:03:45 AM

Hi - I'm a Naturopathic Physician and have written a couple of articles about Orovo. You can read them here; http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/821255/more_orovo_product_reviews.html?cat=5 and http://www.associatedcontent.com/user/54294/jaahda_jinnah.html

Posted on 07/06/2008 at 5:07:25 AM

Thanks for the info regarding Orovo pills..I thought about purchasing a bottle, but it claims to do so much it probably won't do much at all..As far as the pyramid scheme is concerned, I believe the proper term is "network marketing" or "direct sales"..a pyramid scheme is when you work for "corporate america" and can never make more than the CEO..biggest scheme ever..or if you're giving money to someone in order to "make it to the top" but there's no product to sale and no formal company to speak of..that's a scheme..I'm sure this company just has reps to sale their product and in turn the reps can sponser their own sales team. Just like Avon, Marykay, Pre-paid legal, Amway and a few thousand others I could name..So sorry to get off the subject, but I just hated when so many are misinformed about other sources of income..I'm sure you can figure out that I run one of these companys myself, so when other people are wondering when their bosses are going to hand out pink slips; I don't.

Posted on 06/04/2008 at 1:06:31 AM

I tried these as well. I wasn't impressed. I cancelled my autoship, and returned the last bottle I received. Their site says they will refund your money within 60 days if you return the unopened product. Good luck! I returned mine the day it arrived, and get a different story everyday. First, they said the package was opened. Now they are saying they never received it. (I wonder how they knew it was open??) I sent the tracking info with the delivery confirmation, and now they aren't responding. I suspect they can't afford to return my money because their product tanked and they are broke. Any reputable company would honor their guarantee, and Orovo won't. For me, that says it all.

Posted on 05/08/2008 at 4:05:09 PM

I bought the Orovo pills...I didn't realize till I went to cancel the monthly "autoship" that it was a pyramid scheme. And the pills don't work for ANYTHING. TrimSpa is more effective then this crap. I also bought: 7DFB, Nootropedelic, and LipoSeduction. They ought to mention on the website that one serving of the 7DFB is six pills twice a day, nootropedelic is 8 and only twice a week, and LipoSeduction is 3-6 pills before your "cheat meals." None of it has proven to do anything they claimed. If anything the 16-24 ounces of water you have to drink to take one serving of each of these pills is what fills you up and makes you not hungry. No improved skin, no mood improvement and certainly no weightloss.

Posted on 03/27/2008 at 10:03:27 AM

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