The European Cosmetic Toiletry and Perfumery Association recommends that Tea Tree Oil should not be used in cosmetic products in a way that results in a concentration greater than 1% oil being applied to the body.
I suppose would liken this to the difference between janitorial products marketed to institutions vs consumer cleansers marketed at grocery stores. The janitorial products are going to have reasons for their composition besides consumer appeal since…
Of course, but in this case they have an SDS and are being marketed for use in ESD and NSF compliant facilities I would hope that there are legit reasons behind their formulations, especially seeing as they are all incredibly similar.
Does it need to be in a typical deodorant container? There is a company called pharmapump which sells airless vacuum dispensers that are pretty good. They will send you out a sample if you ask. MOQ is 25 units at about $1 - 2 ea.
* https://www.ph…
I'm curious how a study published in the Journal of Cosmetic Science got something like that wrong. If it makes no sense to someone like me, how did they not realize it?
Would you mind taking a look at my formula telling me what you think?
Purifi…
Can you explain how they get this result:
"According to the optimum result in retarding urea decomposition in aqueous solution, preparations adjusting with lactate buffer pH 6.0 were subjected to study in this experiment. Pharmaceutical prepar…
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Very appropriate questions. Here are the answers:
1. a. Dealing with a chronic skin problem which requires multiple daily topical applications of top-tier cosmeceuticals is very very expensive -- $20 for 250g of one of them, which…
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It is probably pretty flexible. I imagine that, as many doctor's tend to do, he looked up the max safe dosage and is using that as long as it doesn't cause adverse effects for the patient.