Can PUFAs be absorbed through the skin?
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My question is inspired by a recent haidut post about absorption of nutrients from the air. (auto posted in Literature Review)
I suffer from eczema/rashes, which I can temporarily relieve a bit by applying drops of home-blended oils: wheat germ oil (carrier) with essential oils such as lavender, peppermint, tea tree and the like.
But now it suddenly occurs to me that I might be adding PUFA and phytoestrogens to my body!
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Lavender is super estrogenic. There was a woman who used it topically for her young son. He grew breasts.
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@Ena - Peppermint is also estrogenic. Herbs containing menthol have the same issue.
Can Peppermint Tea Influence Estrogen Levels? Unraveling the Connection
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PRESS, M. (1974). CORRECTION OF ESSENTIAL FATTY-ACID DEFICIENCY IN MAN BY THE CUTANEOUS APPLICATION OF SUNFLOWER-SEED OIL. The Lancet, 303(7858), 597–599. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(74)92653-1
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Also Peat said he would make sure to wash his hands well when getting oil on his hands making oil paints.
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This is why I use the artisan hand soaps made of goat milk and coconut oil
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I'm shocked and angry with myself for not thinking.
Back in the Covid days, when still on keto, I fell for the advertising hype that essential oils were good for almost everything.
I chose wheat germ oil as a carrier oil because it’s high in vitamin E and I’ve been using it ever since. And it actually works for me - it is able to cool down my rashes for a while.
What do you guys use for rashes?
Is there any such thing as an anti-estrogenic essential oil? Or anti-histaminic?
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@natureman
One has to be constantly careful. I googled a recipe for such a soap, and it includes palm, sunflower and castor oil. Plus “essential oils as desired”.But I've found a soup on Amazon with only goat and coconut.
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@Ena
I use coconut oil for body moisturizing. Eczema symptoms gave gone down a lot but not completely eliminated. Still the best effect I've gotten from anything else I've tried. -
@TexugoDoMel said in Can PUFAs be absorbed through the skin?:
PRESS, M. (1974). CORRECTION OF ESSENTIAL FATTY-ACID DEFICIENCY IN MAN BY THE CUTANEOUS APPLICATION OF SUNFLOWER-SEED OIL. The Lancet, 303(7858), 597–599. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(74)92653-1
OMG!
From this paper in Discussion: "It has been claimed that there is " immediate absorption " of E.F.A.s when applied to mammalian skin...It thus seems that linoleic acid is more efficiently utilised when applied to the skin than when given orally or intravenously. Rats fed linoleic acid oxidise about 60% immediately, presumably in the liver, so that one possible explanation for this greater efficiency would be if linoleic acid applied to the skin were incorporated directly into circulating lipoproteins without first going through the liver."# Note on oil application method:
"sunflower-seed oil, whose fatty-acid composition is shown in table 11, was applied to the flexor surface of one forearm and rubbed in. About 230 mg. of oil, containing 120 mg. of linoleic acid, was applied daily throughout the experimental period."