Orovox Drink Review
Orovox, by Orovo, is not a diet pill or even a diet supplement, but a nutritional juice drink, along similar lines as Monavie. With many health boosting ingredients, Orovox claims to be "the only super-juice blend that contains all the weight loss vitamins and nutrients that your body needs."
The Orovox drink contains three "Health Optimizing Blends" of nutritionally dense superfoods and antioxidant-rich ingredients. The "SuperFruits Blend" contains Acai, Pineapple, Red Grape, White Grape, Pomegranate, Red Raspberry, Acerola, Aronia, Elderberry, Cranberry, Goji and Mangosteen, along with oligofructose and xylitol (sweeteners). The "SuperFoods Blend" includes Barley, Acai, Cayenne Pepper, Buckwheat, Flaxseed, Alfalfa Sprout, Lactobacillus Acidophilus, Soy Isoflavones, Garlic and Wheatgrass. The Antioxidant Blend provides Green Tea, Alpha Lipoic Acid, DMAE, Idebenone and Ascorbic Acid. A few extra diet supplement ingredients include Citric Acid, Pineapple Syrup, Xanthan Gum, Potassium Sorbate and Sodium Benzoate (preservatives).
With a lineup like this, it certainly looks impressive. If it truly contained a large proportion of superfoods, it would be high in weight loss vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, antioxidants, essential fatty acids and dietary fiber. However, because they don’t reveal the quantities of the ingredients in this drink, I can’t be sure I’d really be consuming a decent amount of superfoods at all. For all I know, a large percentage of this drink (and others similar to it) could simply be White Grape juice, which is not a superfruit at all, and is considered a sweet liquid filler in most juice drinks. And even though I see a few ingredients that may support fast weight loss, such as Green Tea and Alpha Lipoic Acid, I doubt they’ve included enough to ensure weight loss diet effectiveness. There’s no way to know, anyway.
Furthermore, I don’t see any information about the source of these ingredients. Are they organic and wildcrafted or are they sprayed with pesticides and herbicides? Have they been low-temperature processed to maintain the nutrients, enzymes and life force energy of the foods, or have all the nutrients been destroyed by pasteurization in order to be bottled? And I don’t know about you, but I would rather not ingest the preservatives potassium sorbate and sodium benzoate – in the presence of ascorbic acid, they form into benzene, a known carcinogen.
Oh, and one more thing, one bottle of this stuff retails at $79.99, a pretty hefty price tag. Unless, of course, you want to buy it for less and join their multi-level marketing plan so you can alienate yourself from all your friends and relatives by trying to sell them stuff they didn’t want in the first place.
Conclusion: Because of the lack of ingredient quantity information, and because this product is part of a multi-level marketing program, Weight Loss Guide.com does not recommend the purchase of the Orovox Drink.




