|
BioCare Dermasorb (Tea Tree Oil Cream)
| FREE DELIVERY TO UK AND EUROPE. PRICES
INCLUDE VAT |
Size 25g
£9.74
|
|
|
|
Ingredients:
Australian Tea Tree Oil in
a base of vegetable oil emollients, lactic acid and water.
Background
Various forms of yeasts similar
to those which sometimes affect our skin, have been shown to diminish
in the presence of tea tree oil. Tea tree oil has over the years been
used topically for many different situations including insect bites
and yeast infections of the skin.
Benefits and Features
-
A blend of vegetable emollients and
Australian tea tree oil.
-
Tea tree oil has natural antibacterial
activity.
-
pH adjusted.
-
Used topically for yeast overgrowth
of the skin.
-
Suitable for vegetarians and vegans.
|
Recommended Use:
Apply to the affected area as often as required
or apply as professionally directed.
Contra-indications. Not suitable for internal
use. Discontinue in cases of irritation. Do not apply to inflamed or
broken tissue. Avoid contact with clothing.
Ideal combinations:
BioCare Bio-acidophilus
BioCare Garlic Plus
|
BioCare
BioCare
is an independent, privately owned science based company founded in the United Kingdom
by practitioners with many years experience in biological science and nutrition.
BioCare's emphasis is on quality and innovation in both product development and
manufacturing techniques.
Over the
years, BioCare has been the first to introduce into the United Kingdom, and in some
cases the world, a number of new and exciting nutrition ingredients, products and
manufacturing processes.
BioCare
uses the purest raw materials available in their manufacturing and wherever possible,
produce their own ingredients, thus enabling them to maintain greater control over
what goes into their products. The entire BioCare product range is designed to be
hypoallergenic.
BioCare
and its products are highly respected by British Nutrition Practitioners.
Herbs
For thousands of years, herbs have been used to help maintain many aspects of health
and wellness. Today, research and technology are bringing herbalism into the modern
age – with improved extraction, standardization, and farming methods. Clinical studies
are beginning to validate herbal therapies, so even some in the medical community
are starting to accept them.
Many of
today’s medicines were originally derived from botanicals. Aspirin once came from
the white willow tree, quinine from the bark of the cinchona tree, and digitalis
from foxglove. Herbs are still the basis for Chinese medicine and are important
constituents of many European natural remedies. As Hippocrates said, “Let they food
by thy medicine, thy medicine be thy food”.
Some of
the herbs available on this site are wild-crafted – grown in the wild – while others
are meticulously cultivated on herb farms.