What is Dr Valnet Sweet Orange Organic Essential Oil 10ml used for?
Sweet orange essential oil has antibacterial, anti-staphylococcal, anti-inflammatory and anti-free radical properties. Its antifungal action makes it ideal for preserving certain foods. It is an insecticide essential oil and an airborne relaxant. It is also anxiolytic, reducing salivary cortisol levels.
Dr Valnet Huile Essentielle Orange Douce Bio 10ml 100% pure and natural from organic farming is a chemotyped essential oil, botanically and biochemically defined. Everyone knows the sweet orange (Citrus sinensis - family Rutaceae), this fruit, its fragrance... Useful for good digestion, its slightly soothing essential oil is ideal for subtly perfuming your desserts and your home.
Sweet orange essential oil from the Dr Valnet laboratory offers a delicate citrus fragrance conducive to relaxation.Citrus Sinensis organic essential oil can also be used in cooking to perfume your dishes and desserts.
How to use this essential oil
For epidemic prevention, atmospheric assuaging, insect repellent and inducing a relaxing atmosphere, pour a few drops of sweet orange essential oil into a diffuser. If you don't have a diffuser, place 4 to 5 drops of sweet orange essential oil on a saucer near a source of moderate heat (below 40°C), such as a radiator.
Give your opinion on the advice for use and dosage of Dr Valnet Huile essentielle bio Orange douce 10ml with our partner Verified opinions after your purchase.
What are the precautions for use?
- Do not expose to sunlight within 6 hours of use (photosensitizing).
- Beware of possible drug interactions: ask your pharmacist for advice.
- Not recommended for pregnant or breast-feeding women
- Not recommended for people allergic to limonene or linalool
- Not recommended for asthma sufferers without the advice of an allergist.
- To be used for short periods in cases of renal insufficiency.
- Asthmatics and epileptics must seek prior medical advice, as the latter group is particularly exposed to epileptogenic risk when consumed in high doses.
- Cutaneous application of this essence, characterized by potential skin irritability, requires substantial dilution, i.e. 10% essential oil in a vegetable oil. Subsequent exposure to the sun should be avoided.
- Pregnant women and babies can benefit from diffusion, but caution is advised to avoid confusion with bitter orange (Citrus aurantium, var amara), which is phototoxic.
- Studies indicate limonene accumulation in adipose tissue and effects on the adrenals with prolonged use. Thus, cures should ideally be short, or follow a pattern of three weeks' use followed by a one-week break.
What is its composition?
Sweet orange essential oil contains monoterpene hydrocarbons.
Distilled part |
zest (fruit peel) |
Chemotype |
limonene, linalool |
Distillation |
solvent-free cold pressing |
Origin |
Argentina |
Yield |
250 kg for 1 kg of EO |
Presentation
Dr Valnet's organic sweet orange essential oil comes in a 10ml bottle.
Our advice and expert opinion in pharmacy
We recommend sweet orange essential oil in the following cases:
- Insomnia, stress, anxiety, agitation
- Difficult digestion
- Nausea
- Insect bites
- Palpitations
A little history of the sweet orange
Over 4,000 years ago, the Chinese already appreciated the sweet orange for its medicinal, fragrant and purifying properties. According to one interpretation, the "golden apples" of the Hesperides garden (in Greek mythology) were actually oranges. Unknown to the Greeks, they resembled apples. Their strange golden color was that of orange peel. This explains why, by extension, citrus fruits are sometimes called "hesperides", in reference to the labours of Hercules and "his mission to gather and bring back the golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides". Oranges were introduced to Europe in the 16th century by Portuguese navigators returning from China. In German, the sweet orange is known as the "Chinese apple". Today, the sweet orange, the result of multiple crossbreeding, accounts for around 70% of the world's citrus production.