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Hoodia slimming hopes crushed by report

Hoodia slimming hopes crushed by report

A NEW Unilever report reveals why the consumer goods giant chose to pull the plug on the alleged fat-fighting supplement Hoodia after spending a reported R192 million developing it.

In a clinical trial, Hoodia extract had no impact on appetite or food intake, but it did have a lot of side effects, like vomiting, weird skin sensations and elevated blood pressure and heart rate.Unilever has known this since 2008, but the news is bound to disappoint consumers, who can buy Hoodia for less than N$153 on the Internet.One website, for instance, claims Hoodia will curb your appetite almost immediately, after taking only a few milligrams, and will not make your heart race.Dr Harvey Anderson, a professor of nutrition at the University of Toronto, applauded the new report in an email to Reuters Health.’This is a valuable study showing that the hype around Hoodia and its advertising in products claiming to contain it for weight loss belongs in the too good to be true category’, said Dr Anderson, who was not involved in the Unilever study.Things started out well for the herbal extract, which comes from the succulent plant Hoodia gordonii and has purportedly been used for millennia by Bushmen in the Kalahari trying to ward off hunger on long hunting trips.The plant’s supposedly active ingredient was isolated by South Africa’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), which told Reuters in that Kalahari’s Khomani people stood to get royalties from the Hoodia sales.CSIR signed over the commercial drug rights in the late 1990’s after which Unilever picked it up. But in 2008, the London- and Rotterdam-based company suddenly canned the project, telling Bloomberg News that Hoodia didn’t meet safety and efficacy standards.The report, published online in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, shows that’s putting it politely.In their trial, Unilever researchers randomly assigned 49 healthy, overweight women to one of two groups. The women were allowed to eat as much as they wanted during their stay at the clinic, yet there was no difference in kilojoule intake or weight loss between the two groups. Along the same lines, Hoodia didn’t stifle anyone’s hunger.However, the Hoodia-treated women didn’t fare as well as the placebo group. They experienced 208 cases of side effects – three times the number reported by women eating normal yogurt – including headaches, nausea, vomiting and odd skin sensations.They showed increases in pulse and blood pressure, and signs of liver damage.’There are many commercially available dietary supplements that claim to contain H. gordonii,’ Unilever’s Wendy Blom and colleagues write in the report.’Given the results here, we cannot exclude the possibility that consumers who take certain of these supplements could experience similar side effects.’ – Reuters Health

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