Fast Weight Loss

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Biggest Loser Contestant Recommends Weight Loss Product

A company called O3 World has introduced a new weight loss product that many people are taking and seeing the inches come off. Heather Hanson from show "The Biggest Loser" said that this product is the only weight loss product that works because it gives her the portion control that she needs.

The product is called "FORM" and it was created by a medical doctor. Each FORM capsule uses pure FDA-compliant hydrogel technology. When a FORM capsule is ingested by an individual, hundreds of microbeads are released and expand in the stomach. These microbeads absorb 500 to 1,000 times its weight in water in just a couple of minutes. The benefits of using FORM is that it is natural, there are no harmful stimulants, and there are no unpleasant side effects.

So before a meal, individuals take a capsule or 2 of FORM and the microbeads will expand in the stomach promoting the release of a hormone that signals the hunger center in the brain to suppress their appetite. Once they are ready to sit down and eat, they are not as hungry and they have portion control. Fewer calories means weight loss.

There are no known side effects of FORM and it does not clog up ones system but instead promotes regularity. The micorbeads are extremely slippery and do not even get absorbed in the body. FORM is designed to behave like many natural foods and it passes through the GI tract undigested.

O3 World has also created meal replacement shakes called FIXX that is packed with nutrition. Many people drink these on the go because it is a quick and easy way to get nutrition in and many people are pressed for time. Some ingredients are organic chocolate, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, probiotics, digestive enzymes, protein, and even a fruit and vegetable blend.

O3 World is revolutionizing the weight loss world.

Heather Zell educates others to live as healthy as possible. For more information on O3 products, visit http://www.slimdownwithO3world.com

AP - A 51-year-old adoptive grandmother's hospitalization from hepatitis has helped spur new vaccination recommendations for people in close contact with children adopted from other countries.

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