African Weight-Loss Secret BURIED for 20 Years?!
Was the secret to effortless weight loss discovered more than 20 years ago… and then hidden from the American public?
When you’re struggling to lose weight, you know that every day is a battle.
You’re eating like a bird and working out like a Navy SEAL… and the scale barely budges.
But more than 20 years ago, African researchers discovered a powerful fat-burning compound.
It helped overweight people torch nearly 12 pounds of unwanted fat… in just one month.
When it was tested over 10 weeks, the results were even more dramatic.
This weight-loss breakthrough was buried… and even dismissed… in America for more than two decades.
Until now…
There’s a good reason you never hear about natural remedies that can help you shed pounds.
Big Pharma is practically printing money selling pricey weight loss drugs loaded with side effects.
They sold $62 BILLION worth of GLP-1 drugs in 2025 alone…
But a simple African seed can run circles around even Big Pharma’s best weight-loss meds.
You see, researchers out of Cameroon decided to put an old folk remedy to the test for a group of overweight adults.
Traditional healers in Western and Central Africa long relied on the seeds from African mango plants to treat digestive problems and manage blood sugar – and they noticed people were often losing weight, too.
But could it deliver the same results in a clinical setting?
Well, research volunteers were given either African mango seed extract or a placebo for four weeks. That’s not much time to lose weight – but African mango delivered HUGE results.
Patients lost an average of nearly 12 pounds… in just four weeks!
And when the same research team ran a larger, 10-week trial, the results were even more dramatic.
Patients lost an average of 28 pounds… in just 10 weeks!
Now, if you’re waiting to hear about this on the evening news… well, keep waiting.
The first study happened 21 years ago! This research has been completely IGNORED in America – and patients who need to lose weight are NEVER told about African mango.
But the results just keep rolling in…
When researchers from South Korea and the United States pooled together results of studies on African mango into what it known as a “meta-analysis” they showed it consistently helped people lose weight.
Even better? It was helping them lower their cholesterol and triglycerides, too.
The secret to African mango is that it’s a fiber that forms like a gel in your gut, to slow digestion and help you feel more full. Plus, it helps control appetite-related hormones like leptin and adiponectin.
Trust me, mainstream medicine is never going to mention African mango to you – and they have a large financial incentive not to.
But you can still get your hands on it.
Emerald Labs sells an African mango seed extract with the same formulation used in research for less than $30 a month. You can find it at https://store.emeraldlabs.com/.
To winning the battle of the bulge,
Ray Thatcher
Research Director, Health Sciences Institute
Sources:
- BioSpace. (2025, July 14). GLP‑1 receptor agonist market valued at USD 62.86 billion in 2025, set to grow at 17.5% CAGR through 2034. BioSpace. https://www.biospace.com/press-releases/glp-1-receptor-agonist-market-valued-at-usd-62-86-billion-in-2025-set-to-grow-at-17-5-cagr-through-2034
- Lee J, Chung M, Fu Z, Choi J, Lee HJ. The Effects of Irvingia gabonensis Seed Extract Supplementation on Anthropometric and Cardiovascular Outcomes: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. J Am Coll Nutr. 2020 Jul;39(5):388-396. doi: 10.1080/07315724.2019.1691956. Epub 2019 Dec 19. PMID: 31855111.
- Ngondi JL, Oben JE, Minka SR. The effect of Irvingia gabonensis seeds on body weight and blood lipids of obese subjects in Cameroon. Lipids Health Dis. 2005 May 25;4:12. doi: 10.1186/1476-511X-4-12. PMID: 15916709; PMCID: PMC1168905.
- Ngondi JL, Etoundi BC, Nyangono CB, Mbofung CM, Oben JE. IGOB131, a novel seed extract of the West African plant Irvingia gabonensis, significantly reduces body weight and improves metabolic parameters in overweight humans in a randomized double-blind placebo controlled investigation. Lipids Health Dis. 2009 Mar 2;8:7. doi: 10.1186/1476-511X-8-7. PMID: 19254366; PMCID: PMC2651880.


