Pages

Showing posts with label Magna rx scam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magna rx scam. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Magna Rx Reviews

Magna Rx: Clearing up the Mystery

Magna Rx has always had a flashy presentation. The bottle is presented in bright red, covered with somewhat difficult to read supplement information, usually shrink-wrapped to another "extra" bottle, in 60 or 90 day supplies. With such a gimmicky presentation, it is no wonder that shoppers cannot help but pick up the bottle and take a look. If they do, they're likely to read a story about a doctor who claims to have invented Magna Rx, although this story has been claimed false in federal court.

With all of this, the market is understandably confused by the outrageous claims made by the label doctor, and by the aggressive online marketing of Magna rx itself, which has faced more than one lawsuit concerning the outrageous claims which imply that the supplement actually does treat symptoms of erectile dysfunction, and increases the size of a man's penis. Shoppers for penis enlargement products are not strangers to bizarre claims, but Magna Rx was one of the first products marketed in a large scale online to claim to increase the length and girth of the penis. Most customers believe that the responsibility of the company to make good on those claims ends with the guarantee, but the legal involvement suggests otherwise.

Of course, the isolated case of a man suing Magna Rx because his penis did not get bigger may not necessarily represent the experience of most customers. There is little statistical data to support either conclusion, although the internet is naturally littered with testimonials claiming either success or failure in equal portions.

The best way to know for sure if Magna rx works or not is to take a look at the ingredients themselves, and not to assume that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. In the case of Magna Rx, there is no reason to assume that there is any special reaction between these ingredients, as it is unlikely that the individual who created Magna Rx has any medical background. He is certainly not the doctor shown on the label. Magna Rx has a large amount of Pygium Bark, Oysters, Oriental Ginseng, and then tiny amounts of other ingredients (<50 mg) which is not enough to cause any effect for herbal remedies. The customer is meant to assume that these ingredients will have some effect over time, but there is no scientific data to support this conclusion.