Wild Rosemary Essential Oil - enhances memory and stimulates the brainWild Rosemary Essential Oil - enhances  memory and stimulates the brain

Aromatherapy

Wild Rosemary Essential Oil - enhances  memory and stimulates the brain
#2822
15.0 ml
Price: $20.00
Quantity

Wild Rosemary Essential Oil is a physical and mental stimulant, as well as, a muscle soother. For centuries it has been used to increase memory retention and stimulate the brain.

How to use

Wild Rosemary Essential Oil is diverse in its uses, potent in its effects and pleasing in its aroma. See how it can be used...

General Instructions

Patch Test First!

Before using any essential oil "neat" (undiluted), do a patch test first. Put a few drops on the back of your wrist or the inside of the elbow and cover with a bandaid. Leave for an hour or more. If irritation or redness occurs, bathe the area with a carrier OIL (e.g. olive oil, safflower oil, Neways' Mixing Oil - NOT water! Water will drive the essential oil deeper into the skin); wipe off and bathe the area again; wipe off and bathe the area again. Do NOT re-cover with a bandaid, but allow air exposure to the tested area for quicker healing. For future use, either reduce the concentration of the essential oil tested by half or more, or avoid it altogether.

You can do the same Patch Test with essential oils that you have diluted (mixed in solution, e.g. with Neways' Mixing Oil or Tangible® Massage Lotion).

Direct "Neat" (Undiluted) Application: "Neat" (undiluted) Lavender Essential Oil and Tea Tree Essential Oil may be applied directly to skin, but Neways recommends diluting all other essential oils. This is especially important for first-time users, children and those with sensitive skin.

A General Note About Using Essential Oils: Western merchandising has stereotypically perpetuated a "more is better" conditioning upon society. Not so with essential oils. Small amounts are able to be effective. Western culture has also perpetuated the "prescription formula" approach - for example, take 3, 3 times a day. Not so with essential oils. Because essential oils are liquid, lipophilic, volatile, aromatic and comprised of very small molecules giving them greater mobility into and within the body, there may be more than one way to effectively use a particular oil.

Starting out, the most important thing is to make sure the essential oils you use on the body are 100% pure, genuine and unadulterated - Neways' are, guaranteed! (Then you know that you are working with the essential oil itself and not with the chemicals and chemical reactions with which it has been adulterated.)

Storage

Store essential oils in a cool place out of direct sunlight.

Keep out of reach of children!

Caution

Never put essential oils in the eyes or the ears. If you accidentally do, use Neways' Mixing Oil to dilute. Never rinse the area with water as water forces the oil deeper into the tissues.

Do not use essential oils internally.

Rosemary is an emmenagogue (may induce menstrual flow) and, therefore, should not be used during the first trimester of pregnancy!

Some oils are photosensitive therefore, do not expose your skin to direct sunlight when applying citrus oils.

Works well with

Detailed product description

Wild Rosemary has been used for headaches, memory loss, mental and physical fatigue, jaundice, failing eyesight, melancholy and emotional fatigue, cellulite, disorientation, muscular pains and sprains, rheumatism, arthritis, nervous exhaustion and disorders, motor impairments, vertigo, healing wounds, migraines, diabetes, coughs, influenza (flu), apathy, depression and lethargy. Wild Rosemary Essential Oil is said to heal dry skin, eliminate dandruff and reduce hair loss. Read more about Wild Rosemary...

It is a colorless oil, having a woody, yet minty, scent. Neways' Wild Rosemary Essential Oil is distilled to improve its healthful properties from wild rosemary plants growing in Tunisia.

Wild Rosemary Essential Oil (Rosmarinus officinalis) when combined with Peppermint Essential Oil, Lavender Essential Oil helps to give feelings of relief from headache pain and migraines. Diffused into the air, Wild Rosemary Essential Oil acts as a natural deodorizer and air freshener.

Extensive studies by occupational psychologists have shown that Lemon Essential Oil's or Wild Rosemary Essential Oil's scent may help with concentration, may reduce stress, and Lavender Essential Oil, interestingly, promotes a desire to buy things. Large Japanese companies are using scent throughout their employees' workstations to help improve their performance - Lemon Essential Oil in the morning for pick-me-up feelings, Rose at lunch time for relaxation, and wood scents, like Rosewood, in the evening for stimulation and refreshment.

Neways guarantees all of our essential oils are raw, pure, unaltered, genuine and therapeutic. We do not alter our essential oils with synthetic fragrances, chemical additives, or vegetable oils. Our single essential oils are all single species, and our blends are combinations of single species. To our knowledge, Neways is the only large company in America that can truthfully make this claim. Quality DOES make a difference!

Wild Rosemary Essential Oil is diverse in its uses, potent in its effects and pleasing in its aroma. See how it can be used...

QUALITY

All Neways' single Essential Oils are derived from single species.

Each Neways' Essential Oil is inspected by a third-party source to ensure that it meets the strictest guideline for purity, authenticity and therapeutic value.

Before crops are distilled into Neways' Essential Oils, each crop is carefully examined for traces of chemicals or pesticides. Only after the crop is determined to be completely free of these adulterations are the crops then distilled into Neways Essential Oils.


Rosemary

Botanical name: Rosmarinus officinalis

Parts Used and Where Grown

Rosemary is a small, fragrant evergreen shrub. The rosemary plant originated in the countries surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. However, it now grows in North America as well. The leaf is used in herbal medicine.

Rosemary has been used in connection with the following conditions (refer to the individual health concern for complete information):

Rating Health Concerns
*

Atherosclerosis

Chronic candidiasis

Indigestion

Infection

Rheumatoid arthritis (topical)

*** Reliable and relatively consistent scientific data showing a substantial health benefit.

** Contradictory, insufficient, or preliminary studies suggesting a health benefit or minimal health benefit.

* For an herb, supported by traditional use but minimal or no scientific evidence. For a supplement, little scientific support and/or minimal health benefit.

Historical or traditional use (may or may not be supported by scientific studies)

Throughout history, rosemary was used to preserve meats.1 It has long played a role in European herbalism and popular folklore. Sprigs of rosemary were considered a love charm, a sign of remembrance, and a way to ward off the plague. Rosemary was used by herbalists as a tonic for the elderly and to help with indigestion.2 In ancient China, rosemary was used for headaches and topically for baldness.3

Active constituents

A number of constituents have shown activity in the test tube. The volatile oil, including eucalyptol (cineole), is considered to have potent antibacterial effects4 and to relax smooth muscles in the lungs.5 Rosmarinic acid has antioxidant activity6 and another ingredient of rosemary, known as carnosol, inhibits cancer formation in animal studies.7 No human studies have confirmed rosemary's use for these conditions.

How much is usually taken?

The German Commission E monograph suggests 3/4 to 1-1/4 tsp (4 to 6 grams) of rosemary leaf per day. 8 A tea can be prepared by adding 2 teaspoons (10 grams) of herb to 1 cup (250 ml) boiling water and allowing it to steep in a covered container for 10 to 15 minutes. This tea can be taken several times per day. Rosemary tincture, 1/2 to 1 teaspoon (2 to 5 ml) three times per day, may also be used. The concentrated volatile oil should not be taken internally.

Are there any side effects or interactions?

There is no evidence to indicate that intermittent intake of moderate amounts of rosemary poses any threat during breast-feeding. However, internal intake of the herb and oil should be avoided during pregnancy because the oil may act as an abortifacient (an agent that may induce an abortion).9

An extract of rosemary taken with a meal by healthy women inhibited the absorption of non-haem iron (e.g., the form of iron in plant foods) by 15%.10 Frequent use of rosemary could, in theory, promote the development of iron deficiency in susceptible individuals.

At the time of writing, there were no well-known drug interactions with rosemary.

REFERENCES

1 Castleman M. The Healing Herbs. New York: Bantam Books, 1991, 452-6.
2 Weiss RF. Herbal Medicine. Beaconsfield, UK: Beaconsfield Publishers Ltd, 1988, 185-6.
3 Leung AY, Foster S. Encyclopedia of Common Natural Ingredients Used in Foods, Drugs, and Cosmetics, 2d ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1996, 446-8.
4 Huhtanen C. Inhibition of Clostridium botulinum by spice extract and aliphatic alcohols. J Food Protect 1980;43:195-6.
5 Aqel MB. Relaxant effect of the volatile oil of Rosmarinus officinalis on tracheal smooth muscle. J Ethnopharmacol 1991;33:57-62.
6 Leung AY, Foster S. Encyclopedia of Common Natural Ingredients Used in Foods, Drugs, and Cosmetics, 2d ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1996, 446-8.
7 Singletary K, MacDonald C, Wallig M. Inhibition by rosemary and carnosol of 7,12-dimethyl-benz [a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced rat mammary tumorigenesis and in vivo DMBA-DNA adduct formation. Cancer Lett 1996;104:43-8.
8 Blumenthal M, Busse WR, Goldberg A, et al., eds. The Complete Commission E Monographs: Therapeutic Guide to Herbal Medicines. Boston: Integrative Medicine Communications, 1998, 197.
9 Newall CA, Anderson LA, Phillipson JD. Herbal Medicine: A Guide for Health-Care Professionals. London: Pharmaceutical Press, 1996, 229-30.
10 Samman S, Sandstrom B, Toft MB, et al. Green tea or rosemary extract added to foods reduces nonheme-iron absorption. Am J Clin Nutr 2001;73:607-12.
All prices are in US dollars. Payment should be made in UAH according to the National Bank official rate at the time of purchase.

This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
All products are made in the USA and certified by the Ukrainian State Committee of Standardization, Metrology and Certification.
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