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Note: We do not support product testing on
animals and in no way encourages this activity. Emu Essence
products are not tested on animals.
Interesting Information on Emu Oil
and Scalp Treatments
Excerpts from "Emu Oil: Reexamining a
Natural Remedy With Todays Technology"
Michael Holick, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Medicine,
Physiology, and Dermatology at Boston University School of Medicine,
conducted a study involving a processed emu oil, and the results
were so outstanding that they quickly became a topic of conversation
in many medical and other journals.
Dr. Holick revealed that he and his associates
had been very interested in looking at factors that stimulate and
inhibit both skin and hair growth...
"They had told me about the wondrous things
that its doing, at least from the folklore of the Aboriginal
people and also from their own acecdotal experience. My feeling
was that the only way to really know whether or not this oil has
some biologic property was to do a control study in a laboratory
setting...
"We found that there was about a 20% increase
in the proliferative activity, or the growth activity of the skin
in the animals... " said Dr. Holick. "And when we looked
at the hair follicles, and the thickness of the skin, it showed
that the hair follicles were much more robust, and that the skin
thickness was remarkably increased, suggesting... the stimulation
of skin growth and hair growth in these animals. Also, we discovered
in the same test that over 80% of hair follicles that had been asleep
were woken up, and began growing hair."
"A hair follicle goes through a cycle.
It goes from a resting stage into an active growth period, and then
it goes back to sleep again. We woke up all the hair follicles by
stimulating them, and then we wanted to see if we could further
stimulate these hair follicles by topically applying emu oil. We
found that there was an enhancement in the growth activity of the
hair follicles. So it gives us a very good scientific indication
that we were stimulating skin growth," Dr. Holick elaborated.
Some more information from the same book mentioned
above:
According to an article by Dr. Michael F. Holick
and James F. Kinney appearing in Drug & Cosmetic Industry
magazine in January of 1996, Dr. Holick and his colleagues have
been interested in developing new products that will specifically
enhance skin and hair growth. It was asserted that the "ideal
topical moisturizer that would help aging skin should have the ability
to help reverse skin dryness and scaling by enhancing the ability
of the skins upper layers to hold on to water. If the product
could also penetrate into the epidermis and stimulate epidermal
growth to rejuvenate its rete ridges and could enhance the thickness
of the dermis, this product would be ideally suited to help the
ravages of skin aging."
The article notes that additional research
"is needed to determine whether the effects that were seen
in mice are equally applicable to humans."
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