So what's truly GOOD & what's really BAD?
- Aloe Vera -
It's been known throughout history to have medicinal properties, used
to cure various ailments and nowadays, the myths surrounding it that go
back 5,000 years to the ancient Chinese, Egyptians and Greeks are no
longer myths but medical fact. Scientists have found that the Aloe Vera
gel is a mixture of antibiotic, astringent, coagulating agent, pain
inhibitor, cell growth stimulator and scar inhibitor. It contains a
total of 70 "essential ingredients" including most vitamins including B12, minerals, enzymes, protein and amino acids.
You can even buy it in a form which can be drunk and is used to help
against asthma, insomnia, indigestion, heartburn, constipation,
hemorrhoids and ulcers to name but a few.
The plant's gel not only helps to heal scars and damaged skin tissue
but it can also heal itself! The leaves have no stalks or woody parts
and are kept upright by the water pressure of the gel. A leaf, slashed
across with a sharp knife, first spurts out its "lifeblood" as the flesh on its leaf is opened. A few seconds later the wound films over. The next few minutes a rubber-like, protective coating effectively seals off loss of water. In a short time, the wound heals completely. The plant contains a wound healing substance that does this.
- Beeswax -
Beeswax is a truly amazing substance! It has an almost indefinite shelf
life - beeswax found in ancient Egyptian tombs has retained its pliability
even after thousands of years. Its beautiful natural color and sweet scent
need no chemical enhancement.
Beeswax is made by worker bees.
The rich color of beeswax is a result of the floral sources the bees
forage on. Beeswax is almost pure white when first secreted, but gets
its color from the pollen and propolis the bees gather. The natural variations
in color range from almost white to almost black. Because of it's holding and protective properties it is believed to have antioxidant properties.
- Hemp Seed Oil - From the hemp plant, Cannabis sativa. Because both hemp and marijuana are from the genus Cannabis, they are often thought (erroneously) to have similar properties. Yet because hemp contains virtually no THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol), the active ingredient in marijuana, it is not used as a drug of any kind. In cosmetics, hemp seed oil is used as an emollient (A substance added to a formulation that gives it softening ability.)
- Mineral Oil -
The notion that mineral oil is
bad for skin has been around for some time, with Aveda being the most
visible company to mount a crusade deriding these ingredients.
According to many companies that produce "natural" cosmetics, mineral oil is a
terrible ingredient because it comes from crude oil and
is used in industry as metal-cutting fluid (among other uses) and,
therefore, can harm the skin by forming an oil film and suffocating it.
This foolish, recurring misinformation about mineral oil
is maddening. After all, crude oil is as natural as any other
earth-derived substance.
Cosmetics-grade mineral oil is considered the safest, most nonirritating moisturizing ingredients ever found (Sources: Cosmetics & Toiletries, January 2001, page 79; Cosmetic Dermatology, September 2000, pages 44–46). Yes, it can keep air off the skin to some extent, but that's what a good antioxidant is supposed to do; they don't suffocate skin! Moreover, mineral oil is known for being efficacious in wound healing, and are also considered to be among the most effective moisturizing ingredients available (Source: Cosmetics & Toiletries, February 1998, pages 33–40).
- Olive Oil - Used as an emollient and thickening agent in cosmetics.
- PEG - PEG stands for polyethylene glycol. Various forms of PEG compounds are mixed with fatty acids and fatty alcohols to create a variety of substances that have diverse functions in cosmetics, including surfactants, binding agents (to keep ingredients blended), stabilizers, and emollients. The only negative research for this ingredient indicates that large quantities given orally to rats can cause tumors.
- Peppermint - Both the oil and the extract can have antimicrobial properties but it can also have an irritating, sensitizing effect on skin. Peppermint is a counter-irritant. Counter-irritants are used to induce local inflammation for the purpose of relieving inflammation in deeper or adjacent tissues. In other words, they substitute one kind of inflammation for another, which is never good for skin. Irritation or inflammation, no matter what causes it or how it happens, impairs the skin's immune and healing response. And although your skin may not show it, or doesn't react in an irritated fashion, if you apply irritants to your skin the damage is still taking place and is ongoing, so it adds up over time.
- Rosemary - Can have antioxidant benefit for skin but its aromatic components can cause irritation, sensitizing, or toxic reactions on skin.
- Sodium Lauryl Sulfate or Sodium Laureth Sulfate (SLS) (SLES)
Possibly one of the largest internet hoax of the late 1990's. We have found the source of the ridiculous claim that sodium laureth sulfate causes cancer. This falsehood is being propagated by a company called Neways International. I encourage all who read this message to spread the word about this immoral marketing practice. To capitalize on people's justifiable fear of this terrible disease to sell a commodity product like shampoo is shameful at best.
We have collected some quotes from various medical professionals that discredit Neways Marketing scam."I am experienced in the personal care industry, and am very familiar with the safety and toxicology testing done on SLES. Without a doubt, this chemical DOES NOT cause cancer in animals or humans. SLES and its unethoxylated sister, sodium lauryl sulfate, are used in shampoos, soaps, body washes, and other products you find in the home. These are synthetic detergents. They are not foaming agents. These chemicals, in their undiluted form, are irritating to the skin and eye. They are used at very low concentrations (around 1%) in most formulas. At this percentage, they provide effective cleansing without being irritating to the skin and scalp."
Sodium Lauryl Sulfate -- Not a Cancer Risk
"I'm a medical doctor, board-certified in both anatomic and clinical pathology. I operate the world's largest free online personalized health information service. I have gotten at least twenty inquiries about the sodium lauryl sulfate E-mail campaign. The author claims that sodium lauryl sulfate, a detergent found in some shampoos and toothpastes, causes cancer in laboratory studies using animals.
Life has taught me not to attribute to malice what is adequately explained by stupidity. This one's a misunderstanding. Here's the truth:
Sodium lauryl sulfate is routinely used to solubilize chemicals used in cancer experiments prior to injecting them into test animals. Somebody read the list of substances injected, and mistook the solubilizer for the active ingredient.
You may use your shampoo and toothpaste without worrying about sodium lauryl sulfate."
Ed Friedlander, M.D., Pathologist
Extracted from: http://worldmall.com/erf/sls.htm
"Sodium Laureth Sulphate (SLS) - Internet Hoax A letter has been circulating the internet which claims that there is a link between cancer and sodium laureth (or lauryl) sulphate (SLS), an ingredient used in shampoos and toothpastes. Health Canada has looked into the matter and has found no scientific evidence to suggest that SLS causes cancer. It has a history of safe use in Canada.
Upon further investigation, it was discovered that this e-mail warning is a hoax. The letter is signed by a person at the University of Pennsylvania Health System and includes a phone number. Health Canada contacted the University of Pennsylvania Health System and found that it is not the author of the sodium laureth sulphate warning and does not endorse any link between SLS and cancer."
Health Canada considers SLS safe for use in cosmetics. Therefore, you can continue to use cosmetics containing SLS without worry." -- This is directly from the Canadian Health and Welfare Website (similar to USA FDA)
"I am a pharmaceutical chemist with a Ph.D. in Chemistry, and have spent some time searching the internet for a well-designed, legitimate clinical study which demonstrates a correlation between cancer and either sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) or sodium laureth sulfate (SLES), and have found nothing. This is not unexpected since these compounds are simply mild detergents which help to dislodge and/or dissolve dirt, oils and protein during the cleaning process.
In the meantime, please don't waste your money on cheap marketing tricks, and don't throw away a perfectly good product because of some snake-oil company's spurious claims. It appears that some unscrupulous marketing shills have been upsetting many people and trying to sell their products by spreading these ridiculous rumors."To learn more about ingredient hoaxes visit this page: http://www.cosmeticcop.com/learn/article.asp?PAGETYPE=ART&REFER=SKIN&ID=30
- Synthetic Fragrances - One or a blend of either volatile and/or fragrant plant oils that impart aroma and odor to products. These are often skin irritants.
- Synthetic Colors - Inorganic pigments (of various colors) permanently listed by the FDA for external use only, including around the eye area.
- Tea Tree Oil - Also known as melaleuca, from the name of its plant source, Melaleuca alternifolia. It can have disinfecting properties that have been shown to be effective against the bacteria that cause blemishes. Concentrations of 5% to 10% are recommended. However, the amount found in most skin-care products is usually less than 1% and, therefore, considered not to be effective for disinfecting.
- Witch Hazel - Can have potent antioxidant properties some anti-irritant properties. However, according to the Consumer’s Dictionary of Cosmetic Ingredients, Fifth Edition, Ruth Winter, 1995, Random House), “Witch hazel can have an ethanol [alcohol] content of 70 to 80 percent. Witch hazel water … contains 15% ethanol.” The alcohol can be an irritant. Witch hazel also has a high tannin content (and tannin is a potent antioxidant), which can also be irritating when used repeatedly on skin, though when used for initial swelling from burns it can reduce inflammation.
