Analyze/Detox Greens Powder
Proprietary "detox" greens blend (green tea extract, milk thistle/silymarin, chlorella and others) with undisclosed per-ingredient doses
Sample analysis

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.

DROP
No clinical evidence · skip
TIER F EVIDENCE €1.33 / DAY
Evidence
Tier F
Debunked
Dose
Undisclosed. The label lists ingredients but hides per-ingredient milligrams behind a single proprietary "detox" blend weight.
Off studied range
Interactions
4
See screening below
Cost / day
€1.33
Per effective dose
Hype vs. evidence
The label's claims, rewritten honestly against what human trials actually show.
Claim
Detoxifies and removes toxins
Evidence
No RCT has shown any commercial detox removes toxins or helps healthy people; your liver, kidneys, and gut already do this continuously.
Claim
Supports weight loss
Evidence
A Cochrane meta-analysis put green tea's weight effect at about −0.04 kg, statistically null and clinically meaningless.
Claim
Natural, so it's gentle and safe
Evidence
Concentrated green-tea extract is an established cause of idiosyncratic liver injury, over-represented in multi-herb blends.
The evidence
ABCDF
Debunked

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.

Quality audit
Trust score
Red
GMP verified
Not verified
Third-party tested
No independent testing
Certificate of Analysis
No batch-specific certificate of analysis published; no lot-level assay for EGCG content, heavy metals, pyrrolizidine alkaloids or microbial limits.
Contaminant risk
Category carries real contamination and adulteration risk: botanicals can carry lead, arsenic and pyrrolizidine alkaloids, and multi-herb "detox/greens" blends are recurrent sources of severe supplement-associated liver injury.
Transparency
Proprietary blend conceals every per-ingredient dose; ingredients appear in descending-weight order only, with no quantification and no independent verification.
Interaction screening
Green tea extract (EGCG) + fasted or high-dose intake
Taking the extract fasted or in bolus doses raises EGCG bioavailability and the risk of idiosyncratic hepatocellular injury. Avoid if you have liver disease; stop immediately at any jaundice, dark urine, nausea or right-upper-quadrant pain and check transaminases.
Significant
Vitamin-K-rich greens (chlorella/spirulina) + warfarin
Variable and undisclosed vitamin K content antagonises warfarin and can destabilise INR in either direction. Avoid, or keep intake rigidly constant with closer INR monitoring.
Significant
EGCG + alcohol or other hepatotoxic agents/supplements
Additive liver stress. Multi-ingredient herbal blends account for the most severe liver-injury outcomes in case series, and the hidden formula makes stacking risk impossible to assess.
Significant
Silymarin / green tea catechins + CYP-metabolised drugs
Both can modestly and variably affect CYP3A4/CYP2C9 and drug transporters. Clinically relevant mainly for narrow-therapeutic-index drugs; a concern precisely because you cannot see the doses.
Minor
CriticalSignificantMinorBeneficial
Cost per effective dose
€1.33/ day · per effective dose
Category benchmark · €0.10
≈13× the category benchmark for the same outcome.
What you’re actually paying for
€39.90 / month
Marketing & the 'detox' story · 60%Cheap commodity plant powder · 30%Packaging · 10%
Before you buy
What to verify before buying
  • 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)
Why this verdict could change
  • 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)
Cited references · 7 key sources
[1]Klein AV, Kiat H. Detox diets for toxin elimination and weight management: a critical review of the evidence. J Hum Nutr Diet. 2015;28(6):675-86. PMID: 25522674. DOI: 10.1111/jhn.12286
[2]Jurgens TM, Whelan AM, Killian L, Doucette S, Kirk S, Foy E. Green tea for weight loss and weight maintenance in overweight or obese adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012;12:CD008650. PMID: 23235664. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD008650.pub2
[3]Oketch-Rabah HA, Roe AL, Rider CV, et al. United States Pharmacopeia (USP) comprehensive review of the hepatotoxicity of green tea extracts. Toxicol Rep. 2020;7:386-402. PMID: 32140423. DOI: 10.1016/j.toxrep.2020.02.008
[4]Yu Z, Samavat H, Dostal AM, et al. Effect of green tea supplements on liver enzyme elevation: results from a randomized intervention study in the United States (Minnesota Green Tea Trial). Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2017;10(10):571-9. PMID: 28765194. DOI: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-17-0160
[5]Navarro VJ, Barnhart H, Bonkovsky HL, et al. Liver injury from herbals and dietary supplements in the U.S. Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network. Hepatology. 2014;60(4):1399-408. PMID: 25043597. DOI: 10.1002/hep.27317
[6]Mazzanti G, Di Sotto A, Vitalone A. Hepatotoxicity of green tea: an update. Arch Toxicol. 2015;89(8):1175-91. PMID: 25975988. DOI: 10.1007/s00204-015-1521-x
[7]Fried MW, Navarro VJ, Afdhal N, et al. Effect of silymarin (milk thistle) on liver disease in patients with chronic hepatitis C unsuccessfully treated with interferon therapy: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2012;308(3):274-82. PMID: 22797645. DOI: 10.1001/jama.2012.8265