NxLabs Methyl Ripped Adrenaline and how it can help me lose weight

NxLabs Methyl Ripped Adrenaline is based on the simple premise that adrenaline can help you lose weight, and if those feelings can be extenuated then the calories burned in the process will be greater. In theory, increased adrenaline  “improves reaction time, increases athletic performance and…helps you get ripped” – or so says NxLabs. I have a hard time believing that you can actually synthetically produce adrenaline and channel it specifically into weight loss. That seems like an awfully big pill to swallow.

I mean there’s a reason the body doesn’t produce adrenaline all the time. The effects of having your body constantly amped on adrenaline could be damaging to your overall health. No amount of weight loss is worth that risk? Besides isn’t that why you’re losing the weight – to reduce health risks?

Putting the obvious risks aside, I really don’t see anything in the pill that stimulates adrenaline production, which is somewhat puzzling considering the name suggests that it can boost this natural phenomenon in my body. From what I see, their formula is based on caffeine to boost metabolism – which is not bad but won’t produce the spike in adrenaline.

What’s inside NxLabs Methyl Ripped Adrenaline?

There’s not a ton of ingredients in the pill, relatively speaking, which we actually like; you can dilute a product if you put too much into it. But formula does include both caffeine anhydrous and green tea which both play into the caffeine boost we’ve been talking about.

The amounts of these ingredients will increase your metabolism, energy, heart rate and anxiety level – which can give you a stomachache and the jitters.  So keep that in mind. Some people really like those jitters/nervousness when they’re working out, count me as one of the people who don’t.

NxLabs also included White Willow Bark, which really does little to promote weight loss.  But the extract contains salicin, which the body converts to salicylic acid and has the same effect on the body as aspirin. This helps the dieter to feel better, and if a dieter feels good, he or she is more likely to be more committed to losing weight. I know, that’s a reach, but that’s the honest-to-goodness truth behind White Willow Bark.

Other ingredients include: Vitamin B1, bitter melon extract, svetol green coffee extract, rhodiola extract, bacopa extract, white willow bark, ginger extract, garlic oil, cayenne extract, phytosterol extract and black tea.

To be quite honest, I really see little in the pill that makes me take a second look. It looks like a million other weight loss pills that you can find in the vast wilderness that is the web. The pill is neither really good, nor is it really bad – just stuck somewhere in the middle area.

The good

  • Contains solid ingredients
  • Inexpensive

The bad

  • Can it really harness the power of adrenaline
  • Potential for negative side effects
  • No money-back guarantee

The way we see it

It claims to “harness the power of adrenaline” and I just don’t know if it can deliver on those claims. It’s essentially a caffeine-based stimulant that should produce some results but at the same time could also manifest several other negative side effects. I think there are better product on which you can spend your hard earned money on; move onto one of those.