Vitamins / supplements to aid weight loss
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Time and a calorie deficit that's it, that's the best we can do!!5
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I started using a cheap fitness tracker to track my sleep and found that I was very restless during the night. I used a very low dose melatonin for short term use with my doctor's permission and found that it helped reset my sleep cycle. If I don't sleep well I seem to have a lot more trouble controlling my appetite and have much less motivation to exercise. I think caffeine is mostly bad news and should be severely limited since it messes so much with sleep and stress levels.0
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RAD_Fitness wrote: »yohimbine and green tea extract both have been studied and have been shown to help
Yohimbine does work on stubborn bodyfat and has been shown to have benefits for lean people.
Green Tea is useless.2 -
I take an omega 3 fish oil for health but nothing is going to 'aid' your weight loss supplement wise. A tidy consistent deficit is adequate.1
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feel free to supplement your deficit with some cardio if you want to speed it up.0
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@robynsg2014 sorry you got jumped on for an innocent question. The MFP folks are generally great, but the claws sure come out if we sniff any hint if acceptance for surgical or pharmeceutically-assisted weight loss.
That is not what you were suggesting, and you didn't deserve what felt like a group pile on, even if everyone is mostly polite about it.
It is interesting how adamant and even angry members can be about that stuff. I think it is like hazing at colleges--if I had to go through something miserable, no one else gets to have it better.
I do wonder if some of the people who actually get nasty about surgery it pills, even when the patient is massive, feel the same way about methadone for heroin users or in-store treatment for long-time alcoholics--or if they can see the health value of those "shortcuts" since they haven't had to deal with those addictions.
Anyway, hope this didn't turn you off of the MFP community.8 -
MazzyToday wrote: »@robynsg2014 sorry you got jumped on for an innocent question. The MFP folks are generally great, but the claws sure come out if we sniff any hint if acceptance for surgical or pharmeceutically-assisted weight loss.
That is not what you were suggesting, and you didn't deserve what felt like a group pile on, even if everyone is mostly polite about it.
It is interesting how adamant and even angry members can be about that stuff. I think it is like hazing at colleges--if I had to go through something miserable, no one else gets to have it better.
I do wonder if some of the people who actually get nasty about surgery it pills, even when the patient is massive, feel the same way about methadone for heroin users or in-store treatment for long-time alcoholics--or if they can see the health value of those "shortcuts" since they haven't had to deal with those addictions.
Anyway, hope this didn't turn you off of the MFP community.
This thread isn't about surgery or prescription weight loss drugs....6 -
This isn't related to weight loss, per se, but I experimented with my diet a little bit and realized that I felt fuller and more content eating within my allotted calories when I ate a protein-heavy diet. Combined with increased strength training, I decided that eating a protein-rich diet would benefit me -- but we can't afford much meat, and I found that I was really struggling to meet my protein goals. As a result I've purchased some protein powder on sale, and it's really helped me reach my protein goal on days when my diet just doesn't have enough of it. (Half a scoop of protein powder mixed into greek yoghurt for dessert... mmm!)
Other than that, I'm a diagnosed anemic so I take iron pills. When I don't take them I tend to feel quite faint and fatigued, which makes me less likely to work out. I've never felt it necessary to take any other kind of supplements or vitamins.0 -
RAD_Fitness wrote: »It looks like you just copied and pasted that from an article.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17214405
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19074207
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19680234
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19597519
https://examine.com/supplements/green-tea-catechins/
This looks at all the literature regarding green tea (and many supplements for a matter of fact). Below is their summary on fat burning effects:
"There appears to be a fat reducing effect associated with green tea, but it is minor and unreliable".
At best, you might see a slight increase, but that is dependent on many factors, especially bioavailability, dosage and interactions with other vitamins/stimulants.3 -
I take a One a Day vitamin for metabolism support. It basically has b vitamins and it's a gummy so it's not terrible. Idk if its doing much but I figured it couldnt hurt1
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robynsg2014 wrote: »Hi does anyone know of a good vitamin/ supplement to take alongside a healthy diet to aid weight loss?
Generally people take fish oil, multivitamin, protein powder and some form of creatine. There are some popular brands to choose from, but most people in fitness will take these four to aid in their fitness goals.2 -
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