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SupplementScience

Benefits of Bitter Orange (Synephrine)

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult your healthcare provider before starting any supplement. Full disclaimer

Evidence-Based Benefits

  • Thermogenesis — Stohs & Preuss (2012, review of 30+ studies) found synephrine increases metabolic rate without significant cardiovascular effects at standard doses
  • Fat oxidation — Gutiérrez-Hellín et al. (2020, n=13) showed synephrine 3 mg/kg increased fat oxidation during exercise
  • Safety vs ephedra — synephrine has greater selectivity for beta-3 receptors (found in fat tissue) vs alpha/beta-1/beta-2 (found in heart/blood vessels), explaining its better CV safety
  • Combination synergy — synephrine combined with caffeine and hesperidin may produce greater thermogenic effects than synephrine alone

What the Research Says

Synephrine/bitter orange has emerged as the primary stimulant ingredient in weight loss supplements post-ephedra ban. Its beta-3 selectivity provides a thermogenic effect with a better cardiovascular safety profile than ephedra. However, clinical evidence for actual weight loss is limited — most data demonstrates metabolic rate increases and fat oxidation enhancement rather than significant body weight reduction. It is generally safe alone at standard doses but caution is warranted with stimulant combinations.

References

  1. (). A review of the human clinical studies involving Citrus aurantium (bitter orange) extract and its primary protoalkaloid p-synephrine. International Journal of Medical Sciences. DOI