Linée
Linée is not unusual by any definition. It sticks to claims about appetite suppression and weight loss. Actually, it’s unusual, because Linée does not make any blatantly outrageous claims like “lose 30 pounds in 30 days” or “melt away the fat.” I’ve seen appetite suppressants do that before.
Most of the Linée advertising focuses on one mysterious ingredient, a potato protein that Linée calls “Appexium.” What is Appexium?
The Mystery Ingredient
Appexium is just Linée’s name for an ingredient called Pi2. This potato protein supposedly targets a hormone called CCK to promote satiety and suppress appetite. But there is not a single published clinical study that shows this.
Yes, there are sites that are trying to sell Pi2 that brag about all of the studies. But sellers are the only ones bragging about this particular substance. No wonder Linée tries to hide it under a different name.
Is Linée Effective?
Linée is not the effective supplement it claims to be. Using Linée is just another waste of time and money considering the fact that Linée does not have clinical studies or amounts that would seem at all convincing. Glucomannan, a similar appetite suppressant, requires at least 1000mg, and Korean pine nut oil requires at least 3000mg. Linée has only 150mg.
But hey, at least Linée is honest.


