jueves, 5 de noviembre de 2009

What People are Saying about Liposom Sleep Diet

"In the first Month I only Lost Six Pounds.But By Month 3, I had Lost 36 Pounds and my Belly is Gone"
Kim W. Age:42

"I Never Knew Success Could Actually so Simple. I lost 15 Lbs. the first month"
Monica C. Age:27

"This product Really Does Work.Within The First Week, My Energy Went Through the roof!"
Stephen B. Age:53


The Testimonios of Five Skeptical Women Who Did It.



Key Ingredients in Liposom

Green Tea: Strong Antioxidant effect that protects the body from the damaging effect of free radicals

Gymnema Leaf: Abolishes the taste of sugar, which effectively suppresses and neutralizes the craving for sweets.

Yerba Mate Leaf: Yerba Mate is used as a tonic, diuretic and as stimulant to reduce fatigue and suppress appetite.

Guarana Seed : Stimulates the central nervous system and increase metabolism.

Nopal Cactus : Support healthy glucose balance, aids the body in energy production, and sugar balance.

According to Wikipedia.org,

A liposome is a tiny bubble (vesicle), made out of the same material as a cell membrane. Liposomes can be filled with drugs, and used to deliver drugs for cancer and other diseases.

Membranes are usually made of phospholipids, which are molecules that have a head group and a tail group. The head is attracted to water, and the tail, which is made of a long hydrocarbon chain, is repelled by water.

In nature, phospholipids are found in stable membranes composed of two layers (a bilayer). In the presence of water, the heads are attracted to water and line up to form a surface facing the water. The tails are repelled by water, and line up to form a surface away from the water. In a cell, one layer of heads faces outside of the cell, attracted to the water in the environment. Another layer of heads faces inside the cell, attracted by the water inside the cell. The hydrocarbon tails of one layer face the hydrocarbon tails of the other layer, and the combined structure forms a bilayer.[2]

When membrane phospholipids are disrupted, they can reassemble themselves into tiny spheres, smaller than a normal cell, either as bilayers or monolayers. The bilayer structures are liposomes. The monolayer structures are called micelles.

The lipids in the plasma membrane are chiefly phospholipids like phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine. Phospholipids are amphiphilic with the hydrocarbon tail of the molecule being hydrophobic; its polar head hydrophilic. As the plasma membrane faces watery solutions on both sides, its phospholipids accommodate this by forming a phospholipid bilayer with the hydrophobic tails facing each other.

Liposomes can be composed of naturally-derived phospholipids with mixed lipid chains (like egg phosphatidylethanolamine), or of pure surfactant components like DOPE (dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine). Liposomes, usually but not by definition, contain a core of aqueous solution[3]; lipid spheres that contain no aqueous material are called micelles, however, reverse micelles [1] can be made to encompass an aqueous environment.