I only recommend Young Living Essential Oils, these are guidelines only:
The FDA has not evaluated
the statements made here. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat,
cure or prevent disease. I share these experiences with you because of the
results I’ve had. The statements I make here are in regards to Young Living essential
oils only.
Some guidelines for safe use:
* Always keep essential oils out of reach of children.
* Essential oils rich in menthol, such as peppermint should
not be used on the neck or throat area of children under the age of 30 months.
* Never put the oils directly in the ears and keep them away
from the eye area. Don't touch contact lenses or rub your eyes with essential
oils on your fingers. Even tiny amounts, oils high in phenols such as cinnamon,
thyme, clove, lemongrass, and bergamot may damage contacts and irritate the
eyes.
* Keep the lids tight and bottles away from the light and
store in a cool place.
* Make sure you always have a bottle of vegetable oils
nearby when handling essential oils. Dilute the essential oils in vegetable oil
if it irritates you.
* Pregnant women should consult a health care professional
when starting any type of heath program. Also, make sure you read Is
Aromatherapy Safe in Pregnancy?
* People with high blood pressure and epilepsy should
consult their health care professional before using essential oils. Essential
oils not to be used by people prone to epilepsy are: clary sage, cajuput,
eucalyptus, Fennel, hyssop, lavender (lavandula stoechas), rosemary, sage and thyme
*Essential oils not to be used by people with high blood
pressure are: Cypress, cajuput, eucalyptus, Hyssop, rosemary, sage and thyme.
Also, use with caution: basil, tarragon, wintergreen/birch,
peppermint, and tansy.
* People with allergies should test a small amount on an
area with sensitive skin such as the inside of the upper arm, for 30 minutes,
before applying to other areas. See the post on How to Perform A Skin Patch
Test. Remember, the bottom of the feet is one of the safest spots to apply the
oils.
* Essential oils not to be used by people with asthma:
camphor, marjoram, oregano, rosemary, yarrow.
* Essential oils not to be used by people with hypotension:
Clary sage and marjoram.
* Essential oils not to be used by people with liver disease
are: clove bud and clove leaf, garlic, oregano, sassafras, thyme, vetiver.
* Essential oils not to be used by people with stomach and
intestinal ulcers: Cinnamon bark.
* Essential oils not to be used by people with estrogen
dependent cancer: Anise, basil and fennel.
* Don't add undiluted essential oils to the bath water. Add
the essential oils to Epsom salt, massage oil, or bath gel to disperse the oils
first. Undiluted oils can cause serious discomfort on sensitive skin since the
essential oils float undiluted on top of the water.
* Keep essential oils away from electricity, open flames, or
sparks. Pine, peppermint, orange, and fir are potentially flammable.
* Essential oils are oil-soluble. Water will spread the oils
over larger surface and can make things worse. Always have vegetable oils on
hand.
* Some oils can produce a reaction called
photosensitization, also called phototoxicity. They can cause redness,
increased pigmentation and trauma to the skin on exposure to the sunlight or
excessive light. Angelica, bergamot, elecampane, ginger, lemo, verbena, lovage,
grapefruit, neroli, opoponax, orange bitter, orange sweet, tangerine, and
patchouli are considered phototoxic. Read more
* Oils that can cause skin irritation are anise see, basil,
bay, bergamot, black pepper, birch, cajuput, camphor, cinnamon bark, clove bud
and leaf, eucalyptus, fir, geranium, ginger, grapefruit, nutmeg, oregano, pine,
thyme, wintergreen, vetiver, yarrow.
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