Do those special "body cleansing" drinks really help?  They're the rage these days.  But are they really helpful?  Read on:
Believers  make one at home or plunk down $8 a bottle, hoping a juice cleanse will detoxify  their body and perhaps help them lose weight. 
With  celebrity backing, cleanses have blossomed into a $5 billion industry. Consumers say drinking them makes them feel great, although experts warn there is  no proof they work and can even be dangerous, according to a report on TODAY  Monday.
In  his Los Angeles kitchen, Martin Muoto makes his own version of the Master Cleanse.  For 10 days, he swaps solid food for a mix of water, lemon juice, cayenne pepper  and agave.
“The  first three days are the toughest in the Master Cleanse. That’s when you’re most  hungry,” Muoto said in the TODAY segment. “If you can get beyond three days, you  feel the toxins just seeping out of your body.”
As  he progresses, Muoto says: “You feel fantastic. You have more energy. You sleep  better and you go through what is almost a spiritual  experience.”
Experts,  though, say there is no scientific evidence the products remove toxins in the  body, a function handled by the liver and kidneys. And they warn that people  subsisting solely on the cleanses are not getting proper  nutrition.
“The basic problem is this is an unbalanced diet approach,” Dr. David Heber, an endocrinologist at UCLA, told TODAY. “There’s no way that a three-day detox diet is going to remove toxins that you may or may not have in your body.”
A short cleanse may not be harmful, however, he said. “Maybe a day or two or three as kind of a jump-start to a diet, because mentally, it’s sort of like throwing down a package of cigarettes,” Heber added.
A  TODAY.com survey of several hundred people found that 60 percent had not tried a cleanse, while  40 percent had. Of those who had used a cleanse, the majority, 61 percent, said  they felt better afterward, with 7 percent saying they felt worse and 32 percent  feeling no different.
TODAY  contributor Dr.  Roshini Raj  was not surprised that so many people indicated they had tried the cleansing  products, saying a lot of her patients ask about them. 
“Everyone  wants to lose weight. They want to feel healthy and they think this might be an  option,” Raj told TODAY’s Willie Geist. “If you find yourself even thinking  about a cleanse, it’s probably a sign that in general you’re not happy with the  way you’re eating and you might want to talk to someone about a balanced  approach that's a more long-term solution.”
Raj,  a gastroenterologist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York, warned that  cleanses are  potentially  dangerous, especially for people with medical conditions or those taking  medication, along with pregnant women and the elderly.
“Some  of the cleanses are very extreme and they incorporate only very few ingredients  in them, so you’re really limiting yourself in terms of not getting enough  protein, potentially not enough fiber and even healthy fats that you need,” Raj  said.
People  who cleanse are unlikely to maintain any weight loss, she  said.
“It’s  very temporary water weight that you’re losing so it’s not going to persist,”  Raj said. “You’re going to eat more later because you’re hungrier. It’s just not  a balanced approach to weight loss, and this notion that you can sort of eat  whatever you want and then cleanse for a week and get rid of all the bad effects  from the prior poor eating just doesn’t make sense.”
“You  want to, of course, eat a lot of fruits and vegetables,” she added, “but have a  balanced diet and you need a long-term plan, not just a three-day or a six-day  cleanse.”
Raj  offered warnings on three types of cleanses.
The  juice cleanse, she said, purports to help with the immune system and to detoxify  the body.
“The  truth is, you’re just getting a lot of fruits and vegetables, which is a good  thing, but to the exclusion of everything else, not so great,” Raj said, adding  that many of the juice products have a lot of sugar. “I don’t mind having a  juice drink instead of one meal, but when it’s three meals for several days,  it’s not a good idea.”
She  said the drawback of adding herbal supplements to a cleanse is that you do not  know how they will react in your body or with medication are taking. A cleanse  made only of raw fruits and vegetables is too limiting for the body, she  said.
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The moral of the story?  Always beware of what you're putting into your body.  And there are no quick fixes when it comes to getting healthy...
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