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| | Solgar Boswellia (Standardised Full Potency Herb) | Solgar Boswellia
Potential applications of Boswellia: Arthritis
Sports injuries Lower limb circulatory disorders Oedema More About Boswellia Anti-Arthritic/anti-inflammatory Boswellic acid, the key active constituent in boswellia, exerts a powerful anti-inflammatory and anti-arthritic activity. Research suggests that the anti-arthritic activity of this herb is even more effective than phenylbutazone (a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Interestingly, boswellia also improved blood supply to arthritis-damaged joints and improved the integrity of the blood vessels in the area. Boswellic acid appears to open up collaterals (alternate blood delivery routes to specific regions of the body) to provide adequate blood supply to the joints damaged by arthritis.
Vascular tonic The beneficial vascular effects of boswellia may also aid disorders where circulatory routes may be compromised, such as in cases of local oedema and vascular dysfunction in the lower limbs. | Directions for Use: As a herbal food supplement for adults, one to two vegicaps daily of Solgar Boswellia, preferably at mealtime, or as directed by a healthcare practitioner. 60 vegicaps - £16.25 Add to Basket
This information is not intended to replace the personal recommendations of your own qualified healthcare professional. | |
About Solgar Quality is a keyword with Solgar. All their suppliers of nutrition products must provide a certificate of analysis with every delivery and Solgar ensure that their own team of chemists and microbiologists checks each batch of raw materials prior to manufacture of health and nutrition products to ensure potency, purity and authenticity. Solgar employ a rigorous system of quality control to ensure that their Gold Standard for purity and potency is met at every stage. Solgar's VM75 is the no.1 multivitamin and mineral formula in America. 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. Solgar Boswellia vegicaps
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