Estrolean
Designed with a bottle strait out of the worst part of the 80′s, Estrolean claims to be a “state of the art weight loss product for women.” Being that their bottle is far below average, let alone state of the art, it is not a good indicator. But the question is not do they have a great bottle. The question is, does Estrolean actually have what it takes to promote greater weight loss?
How does Estrolean work?
They use apple extract, pomegranate extract, sea vegetable extract, lipase, protease, amylase, green tea, guarana, yerba mate, ginger root, citrus aurantium, rhodiola rosea, etc. Again, most of these ingredients have nothing to do with weight loss in the first place, and they are also not gender specific in the least. They don’t even complete a common combination of guarana, yerba mate, and damiana. In and of themselves, these ingredients do not promote weight loss. They have to be combined. Estrolean does have some ingredients that have cetain potential such as citrus aurantium for example. Citrus aurantium has even been compared to the power of ephedrine. But they don’t actually bother using the clinically proven amounts!
Overall Conclusion
All things said, Estrolean would provide the same results or lack thereof for men that it would for women. And being that the retail price, which is likely significantly marked up, is just $29.99, what else can you really expect? We would not recommend wasting time or money on this product, and realistically, many of the ingredients they have would work against women more than anything else, even if they were in the right amounts.

