What is Aloe Vera? |
Written by Phillip LaVeque | |||
Saturday, 03 October 2009 | |||
Many people refer to the active ingredient or extract of Aloe Vera as Aloe. Many scientific studies have shown that aloe is beneficial in speeding the healing of burns, sunburns, cuts, bites, rashes, and lesions, as well as other conditions like indigestion. Unlike many purported natural, plant-based medicines or ointments, Aloe's positive health effects have been well-documented and studied. Aloe Vera has an anti-inflammatory chemical called B-sitosterol that effectively treats many skin conditions arising from insect bites, plant rashes like poison oak, allergic eruptions, etc. Along with another ingredient, salicylic acid, Aloe greatly reduces the time it takes for skin to heal from minor or severe burns. It is used as a topical treatment in the burn wards of hospitals across the world. Pure Aloe gel can be purchased to use on sunburns, spider bites, bee stings, nettle stings, grass rashes, poison ivy and oak, blisters, small cuts, scrapes, and lesions. Since it is a clean, alcohol-free, mild, non-oily, and soothing balm, many parents keep it around for a pain-free treatment of every day skin irritations. Of course, aloe has been incorporated into almost every product designed for skin, from lip balm to sunscreen, moisturizing tissue to hand lotion, and from shampoo to nail polish remover. |