I have been reading about Japanese detoxification foot patches. Does anyone know if these really work?
Tuesday, January 5th, 2010 at
4:57 am
Or is this a hoax?
I hear you, and I am inclined to think so too, but where are you getting your information? I don’t want opinions, I want to know if anyone has heard of a study on this or a conclusive medical source. Thanks for your input tho.
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It’s funny how people have no information to support their feeling that this is a hoax, yet are very quick to say it is. I know much about supplementation and herbal remedies, but have never seen this particular product.
It seems legit, there are many toxins in your feet. I hope someone with real evidence, bad or good chimes in.
I just found this seller on Ebay that only sells detox patches, his reviews are amazing, people seem to really love it. I think I’ll try it myself.
http://cgi.ebay.com/100-lot-DETOX-FOOT-PATCH-PAD-9-editions-FREE-SHIP-USA_W0QQitemZ140121275676QQihZ004QQcategoryZ1279QQcmdZViewItem
Hoax.
The only way to detox is with water, food and exersize. The more your body burns fat and sweats the more your body will naturally detox. The way patches and drinks work is to put more chemicals and stuff into your body to mask the presence of drugs and other things, but they rarely work anymore as drug testing has become more advanced.
If you need to detox, drink water and exersize.
All of these "products" are a waste of money and a hoax.
If your wallet is full of toxic currency, these patches will work wonderfully. They remove those "toxins" from your wallet and send them to the smarter people who are selling the patches.
Otherwise, they do nothing. Nothing at all.