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Weight Loss Products

Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market 2023 Emerging to Manufactures, Size, Growth, Share, Regions

Garcinia Cambogia Extract

Garcinia Cambogia Extract market has emerging market size, share, growth rate, opportunity, application, a key player, top manufacturers. It includes competitive landscape, mergers acquisition analysis, agreements, collaborations, and partnerships with the Garcinia Cambogia Extract market industry.

The Global Garcinia Cambogia Extract report considers today’s first certainties linked into this market, which performs the aspect of an advantage for its members of the company. Even the market report has been presenting Garcinia Cambogia Extract trends on the current market, research of expansion drivers industry, and constraints. It features comprehensive profiles of Garcinia Cambogia Extract industry player’s investigation of improvements in tech, and also version analysis.

Global Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market is estimated to reach a CAGR of  XX% between 2018 and 2023. This report presents a comprehensive overview, market shares, and growth opportunities of Fire Resistant Hydraulic Fluids market by product type, application, key manufacturers and key regions and countries.

In this Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market Research, the years considered to estimate the market size of Garcinia Cambogia Extract are as follows:
History Year: 2013-2017
Base Year: 2017
Estimated Year: 2018
Forecast Year: 2018 to 2023

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The following manufacturers are covered in this report, with sales, revenue, market share for each company: Xi’an Lyphar Biotech, Shaanxi Fuheng (FH) Biotechnology, Shaanxi Guanjie Technology, Wuhan Vanz Pharm, Hunan Kanerga Pharmaceutical Sales, TWO BLUE DIAMONDS, MARUTI FUTURISTIC PHARMA, KINAL GLOBAL CARE, NUTRA GRACE.

Regional Analysis:

North America (United States, Canada and Mexico), Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy), Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia), South America (Brazil, Argentina, Colombia etc.), Middle East and Africa (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa)

Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market Segmentation by Product Type:
0.5
0.6
Other

Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market Segmentation by Applications:
Food Industry
Pharmaceuticals Industry
Other

Garcinia Cambogia Extract market report is based on company, product type, end-user, and key regions. Garcinia Cambogia Extract market segmented by top players/brands, region, type, and end user. Garcinia Cambogia Extract market’s research methodologies are market status, competition landscape, market share, growth rate, future trends, market drivers, opportunities and challenges, sales channels and distributors.

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Key questions answered in the report:

  • What will the market growth rate of Garcinia Cambogia Extract market in 2023?
  • What are the key factors motivating the global Garcinia Cambogia Extract market?
  • Who are the important key players in Garcinia Cambogia Extract market space?
  • What are the market opportunities, market risk and market overview of the Garcinia Cambogia Extract market?
  • What are sales, revenue, and price analysis by types and applications of Garcinia Cambogia Extract market?
  • What are sales, revenue, and price analysis by regions of Garcinia Cambogia Extract industries?

Reason to Buy the Garcinia Cambogia Extract Report:

  • Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market forecast, by countries, type and application, with sales, price, revenue and growth rate forecast, from 2018 to 2023.
  • To analyze the manufacturing industry chain, sourcing strategy and downstream end users (buyers).
  • To describe Garcinia Cambogia Extract sales channel, distributors, traders, dealers etc.
  • To describe Garcinia Cambogia Extract Research Findings and Conclusion, Appendix, methodology and data source.
  • To describe Garcinia Cambogia Extract Introduction, product type, and application, market overview, market analysis by countries, market opportunities, market risk, market driving force.
  • To analyze the manufacturers of Garcinia Cambogia Extract, with a profile, main business, news, sales, price, revenue, and market share in 2018.
  • To display the competitive situation among the top manufacturers in the Garcinia Cambogia Extract Market, with sales, revenue and market share in 2018.
  • To show the market by type and application, with sales, price, revenue, market share 2018.
  • To analyze the key countries by manufacturers, Type, and Application, covering North America.
  • The Garcinia Cambogia Extract market has regions like Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle-East and South America, with sales, revenue and market share by manufacturers, types, and applications.

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Categories
Weight Loss Products

Adverse Event Reports: A Look at the Data on Dietary Supplements

dietary supplements

Out of all adverse event (AE) reports that were submitted to the FDA over a time period of 2.5 years, only 203 out of 41,121 (0.48%) were serious adverse events (SAEs). That’s the findings of a study published in the Journal of Dietary Supplements that looked at one company—Supplement Safety Solutions, which works with dietary supplement marketers to review and report SAEs to the FDA.

The study, titled “Serious Adverse Events Reported with Dietary Supplement Use in the United States: A 2.5 Year Experience” by Stephen M. Schmitz, et al., begins by noting that 52% of U.S. adults report use of dietary supplements: 75% of those adults take vitamins/minerals, 38% take specialty supplements, 29% take herbals/botanicals, 22% take sports nutrition supplements and 15% take weight management supplements.

The study then goes in-depth regarding the principles of “nutravigilance,” which is defined as “the science and activities relating to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse effects related to the use of a food, dietary supplement, or medical food.” Douglas McKay, N.D., senior VP of scientific and regulatory affairs at the Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN) and co-author of the study, told WholeFoods that this system helps make it unique. “The whole idea is interesting. This isn’t a generalized statement—dietary supplements are safe, or aren’t safe—it allows us to look at what AEs are caused by what, what’s associated with what.”

The study found that a total of 532 unique symptoms were reported among the 203 SAEs, with dizziness, syncope, nausea, vomiting, and dehydration among the most common. Weight-loss agents, both thermogenic and nonthermogenic, were the most frequent types of dietary supplements reported with SAEs, followed by glucose control/insulin management agents in a distant second and digestive aids in a still more distant third. This too is important, Dr. McKay says, and also why making generalized statements about safety is useless. “Multivitamins and echinacea aren’t causing AEs. It’s the more aggressively formulated products—weight-loss products, pre-workout products—that tend to have more AEs. This is useful information for formulators and producers to have, because they can use it to make safer products.”

It’s important to note that correlation does not equal causation, and that causal relationships are difficult to determine. For instance, thermogenic weight-loss supplements typically contain ingredients like green tea extract and caffeine; green tea extracts have been associated with cardiovascular side effects, and caffeine has been shown to have neurostimulant effects. Thus, the AEs reported with these supplements—dizziness, tachycardia, chest pain—have a plausible relationship. However, the researchers note in the study, this is not always the case: concomitant medications, dehydration, or preexisting conditions can confound doctors’ abilities to draw a connection between symptom and supplement.

On the other end of the spectrum, nonthermogenic weight-loss agents tended to be associated with gastrointestinal issues and cardiac issues. The researchers noted that the major components in this category, conjugated linoleic acid and Garcinia cambogia, are both generally considered safe, and are not cardiostimulatory, suggesting that at the very least, cardiac AEs associated with these supplements are not likely to be caused by them.

Dr. McKay said on the topic, “This has been a concern since the law requiring AEs to be reported was passed: people might take AEs as being causal, when post-market research like this can’t really determine causal relationships. There’s no way to determine a direct link between a single product and a health issue. This data serves as a signal to the FDA, when there’s something that needs to be examined.” In the study, the researchers noted that not all information was always available—and that includes things like general health and other medications, both of which could be the actual cause.

So what’s the best way to take in this study? As ground-breaking data collection within the dietary supplements industry. “How many dietary supplements are out there?” Dr. McKay asks. “We don’t even know. It’s hard to refute news that slams the industry, because we don’t have the data to do so. We’re hoping that this study will encourage other data-collecting companies to publish their data, so we can get a clearer picture of the industry. We’re hoping that more people will use the Supplement OWL, and so on.” This study is hypothesis-generating, he says, and we need more proof.

Categories
Weight Loss Products

Garcinia Cambogia May Be Risky for Those on Anti-Depressants: Report

Use of popular the weight-loss supplement Garcinia cambogia may be risky to people who are taking certain antidepressants, according a recent case report.

Garcinia cambogia may raise serotonin levels, and if a person taking the supplement is using certain antidepressants known as selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, it could cause serotonin toxicity, LiveScience reports.

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“I am hesitant to label it (Garcinia cambogia) as a dangerous supplement, because until we see more than one case, we want to make sure that this actually is something that is going to occur,” said Dr. Robert Hendrickson, one of the authors of the case report, LiveScience reported.

Hendrickson recommends people who are taking an SSRI not use Garcinia, at least until further research is done. “Not because I know that it will be dangerous, but because there is a chance that it could be,” he told LiveScience. “If I had a family member or a patient who was considering starting Garcinia and they were on an SSRI, I would recommend that they don’t do it for now.”

According to the report published in the Journal of Medical Toxicology, a 35-year-old Oregon woman who had been taking Garcinia cambogia supplements over the course of two or three months while also taking an antidepressant started stuttering and sweating profusely and was admitted to a local hospital’s emergency room.

Medical staff observed the woman’s heart rate and blood pressure elevate to a high level and she had developed foot clonus, involuntary muscle spasms that cause a person’s foot to flex. After the woman was treated for serotonin toxicity with medication and spent several days in the hospital, her symptoms reportedly subsided and she eventually recovered, according to the report.

Garcinia cambogia is also known as tamarind, native to Indonesia. It is a small, pumpkin-shaped fruit and diet supplements made from it are said to help weight loss. Researchers, however, have so far found only mixed results when looking at whether the supplement really aids in the losing of weight.

According to the Dr. Oz Show’s website, the plant from which Garcinia cambogia is derived “offers one of the least expensive herbal supplements on the market. The ingredient from the rind of the fruit could hasten your weight-loss efforts. The natural extract is called hydroxycitric acid, or HCA, and researchers claim that HCA can double or triple one’s weight loss.”

The website did have warnings, though, about the use of the supplement, saying it is “likely safe in normal amounts” but people who are pregnant or breastfeeding shouldn’t take it. Also, those who are taking a diabetic medication like insulin or glyburide or a statin, a cholesterol-lowering drug, should consult their physician.

“Those with Alzheimer’s disease or other forms of dementia shouldn’t take HCA because of the risk of worsening dementia,” according to the website.

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