There is nothing to "detox": your liver and kidneys already do it, and this hidden-dose blend adds real liver risk for no proven benefit.
Drop it.
The premise fails before the ingredients do: no randomised controlled trial has ever shown that a commercial "detox" product removes toxins or improves health in healthy people, and the concept has no credible physiological basis; your liver, kidneys, gut and skin clear metabolic waste continuously without help [1]. Where the blend's actives have any measurable effect it is trivial: a Cochrane meta-analysis of green tea preparations found a mean weight change of about −0,04 kg outside Japan, statistically non-significant and clinically meaningless [2]. Against that non-benefit sits documented harm. Concentrated green tea extract (EGCG) is an established cause of idiosyncratic hepatocellular liver injury; the USP expert review linked case reports to EGCG intakes from roughly 140 mg/day upward and added a cautionary statement to its monograph [3], and a randomised trial in 1.021 women found about 7-fold higher odds of liver-enzyme abnormalities on green tea extract, with enzymes falling on dechallenge and rising again on rechallenge [4]. In the U.S. Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network the share of severe liver injury attributed to herbal and dietary supplements rose from 7% to 20%, with multi-ingredient products over-represented and some cases reaching transplant or death [5][6]. Milk thistle (silymarin), the blend's other headline botanical, failed to beat placebo on liver endpoints even at higher-than-usual doses in a randomised trial [7]. Because per-ingredient amounts are hidden inside a proprietary blend, you cannot confirm that any ingredient reaches a studied dose, or, in the case of EGCG, that it does not exceed a risky one.
- There is no dose to verify; the entire blend is proprietary
- Named per-ingredient milligrams (absent here)
- EGCG content and a heavy-metal / pyrrolizidine-alkaloid screen (absent here)
- The brand discloses per-ingredient doses and removes the concentrated green-tea extract
- A randomised trial shows a real health outcome in healthy people (none exists today)