Does Zyatonix Really Work?

“New Super Pill Kills Fat Cells!” This is the outrageous claim made by the producers of Zyatonix, a diet supplement that is identical, besides in name, to Zyatrim. It actually appears to be a rebranding of Zyatrim with absolutely no variance besides its title. While the Zyatonix website overloads the interested consumer with “scientific data” and “research”, you have to wonder if they actually come through. Does Zyatonix actually have any ingedients or anything else that would promote greater weight loss?
Ingredients Used
Acacia rigidula-this has been known to contain things like methamphetamines and phenylethylamine. It doesn’t necessarily promote weight loss. but it can cause a few problems with the methamphetamine compound, and it is more of a mood lifter with the phenylethylamine.
Methylsynephrine-synephrine is the active component that has been compared to ma huang. They claim that it will help you to burn fat, suppress appetite, and increase energy, all without the side effects of ephedrine.
Phenylethylamine-it is a natural mood lifter that comes from chocolate. It has been known for its appetite suppressing effects as well.
Cassia nomame-a natural lipase inhibitor/fat blocker, this can help you in certain ways. But it is effective basically when combined with an already low fat diet.
Theobromine-a combination between the derivative of chocolate and caffeine, theobromine can give you antioxidant and caffeine related thermogenic fat burning effects at the same time, much like green tea. It requires about 400mg to work
Yohimbine-it has been used as a sexual stimulant. However, it has never been used as a weight loss supplement in reality, and it can cause serious side effects such as liver damage, kidney damage, heart attack, and stroke
EGCG-a thermogenic form of caffeine, it is also rich in antioxidants like EGCG. However, one should keep in mind that it requires at least 400mg of 50% caffeine considering the fact that caffeine is the actual fat burning component
Conclusion
This product does offer a 100% money-back guarantee, which is comforting with the whopping price tag of $59 a bottle. There are quality products, with research behind them, in a similar price range so even the money-back guarantee isn’t as enticing as it seems. The website offers a free trial bottle but there are a lot of hoops to jump through, including calling a 1-800 number which will inevitably result in a longwinded sales pitch. In addition, it ropes you into an expensive auto ship they hope you won’t notice. Zyatonix doesn’t work. So they have to trick you into buying it.
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