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古巴香脂精油

古巴香脂精油

產地:巴西.進口品質優良純度好的.單提原精香氛.精油,原精需要加入合成穩定油質.才能有利保存穩定:成份定量生產標準製成.供應合乎國際標準.GMP認證

  • 售價: $3,200

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古巴香脂精油

Cuban balsam pure essential oil Copaiba balsam Pure Essential Oil
Overview:
[Plant type] :
Cuban balsam, also known as bitter paprika, is produced in northern South America. It is a resin oil obtained from the trunk of Leguminosae plants. The Cuban balsam tree is a tall, evergreen tree with a straight trunk, a cylindrical shape, a dense canopy, a height of 25 to 40 meters, a diameter of about 1 meter, and many branches, with thick trunks and smooth skin. Trees, mainly growing in the jungle of the Brazilian Amazon.
This plant has aromatic bark. Description: http://plant-life.org/symbols/leaf.gif Leaves lush, alternate or opposite leaflet leathery, compound leaves pinnately divided, glabrous, (length 15 cm wide and 9 cm long ), open white flowers (flowering from December to March), nuts seeds are black, small seeds have seeds (2 to 4), and ovals are rich in yellow scent (fruit matures from August to September). Tree species are about 5 centimeters taller and can live up to 400 years.
Cuban balm Copaíba's name comes from Tupi-Guarani's "Cupa-yba" and "Kupayva". Turpan Indian means the deposit tree “árvore de depósito”, indicating that the tree contains a lot of oil.
In 1534, the first publication of Cuban balsam was made by Pethus Martins of Strasbourg, France, by a letter to the then Pope Papa Leo X (1475~1521). The letter described a drug used by indigenous Indians as a drug called Copei.
In late 1560s, a Spanish Jesuit missionary who was preaching in Brazil, Jose de Anchieta (1534~1597), said to his father in the letter that Cuban balm oil had a strong effect on respiratory diseases and wounds. Healing power.
In the middle of the 16th century, the Portuguese historian Péro de Magalhães Gândavo documented Cuba in the book História da Provincia de Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, 1575, in the province of Santa Cruz. The benefits of balm oils are effective in healing analgesia and promoting wound healing, and can be used on eczema, urticaria and warts skin.
Indigenous people in the Amazon basin applied this oil to the body after the battle to heal wounds. Later colonists discovered other uses of this oil. They used it for the treatment of urinary (gonorrhea and syphilis) and respiratory diseases, especially in the treatment of bronchitis. Cuban balm oil has long been used by local Latin American Indian warriors to prevent the healing of wounds from fighting and to give the newborn's navel an anti-inflammatory (anti-inflammatory) and to treat skin dermatophytosis. Cuban balsam came to Brazil from the Portuguese and has been used for more than 500 years in the history of Amazonian traditional folk medicine.
【Cuban Balsam Extracting Process】:
Cuban balsam is a natural product of the detoxification of plant organisms from a biological point of view, and it can be used as a plant defensive agent for animals, fungi and bacteria. The source of this resin oil is the decomposition product of the cell wall of tree soft tissue (mainly composed of sesquiterpenoids and tannins), and Cuban balsam oil accumulates in the fission-secreting cavity and pith, and slowly forms an oil depot. After hitting the bitter buckwheat tree, the clear, colorless, dilute liquid resin oil will flow out of the cracks. However, after a while, a thick yellowish tree oil will flow out. The balsam that flows out will prevent infection. Good fungicide.
Put two holes in the trunk of Cuban balsam. The lower hole is 2 to 3 feet from the ground, and the other high hole is 10 to 20 feet from the ground. Put a bamboo pipe with a valve into the hole of the ground. Under normal conditions, the resin oil of the Cuban balsam will flow out of the bamboo pipe and then be collected in a can. When this kind of drainage operation works After completion, both wells will be plugged and ready for the next use. In the Amazon, many species of Copaifera trees produce Cuban balsam oil. And according to different varieties. The oil extracted from the Cuban balsam tree has a resin color ranging from golden yellow to brown.
Traditional extraction methods: Select a Cuban balsam tree with a trunk diameter of 40 cm or more. Place about 60-70 cm above the ground level on the tree trunk. Drill holes through the trunk and reach the middle of the trunk. The resin will then flow out along the opening. The tube is connected to the container and collected for several days to complete the extraction. After the extraction is complete, seal the opening with clay to prevent infection by fungi or termites. This extraction method is called "sustainable extraction method." Cuban balsam trees can be used to extract resins 2 to 3 times a year. The annual output is about 4 to 5 liters. The extracted resin was a viscous, transparent, light yellow-brown oily liquid.
Cuban balm oil is a colorless to pale green, slightly viscous liquid, and some also have a slight light green fluorescence. It has a peculiar aromatic odor. When Cuban balsam oil is exposed to the air, the resin oil will have a dark brown, thicker, more dense liquid. When it spreads into a large surface area, it will dry out and change. It is very fragile, and this change is partly due to the polymerization and evaporation of its essential oil components. The longer the resin is in the air, the greater the proportion of non-bleachable components. The diversity of these characteristics can be interpreted as even oils from the same Cuban balsam tree, but due to the geographical, soil, climate, environment, humidity, age, the number of draining tree oil, the season will have an impact on it, basically Said that the distilled Cuban balsam has a higher specific gravity and a high evaporation residue, which is particularly suitable for making fixatives in soaps. The Cuban balsam processed by this process lasted longer than the smell of Cuban balsam with low specific gravity and low volatile residue.

Natives in the Amazon region have traditionally used Cuban balm oil as an external skin treatment agent.
In the Peruvian herbal system, Cuban balm oil is used to treat syphilis, gonorrhea, dysuria, skin ulcers, psoriasis, herpes, reduce inflammation, stomach ulcers, tetanus, bronchitis, catarrhal colds, hemorrhage and Lysmann's disease. In Peruvian traditional medicine, three to four drops of resin are mixed with a spoonful of honey as a remedy for natural sore throats.
In Brazil, it is used for respiratory tract spasm, bronchitis and allergies and as an anti-inflammatory agent for topical skin diseases.
Refined Cuban balm oil is widely used in various internal pharmaceutical preparations and external pharmaceutical preparations.
Cuban balms are a good fixative (adjustable and crude) in soap essences. Now used in soaps and care products, it is used as a fixative and has a good synergistic effect.
In the modern perfumery, Copaiba balsam is a very good ingredient; it has a mild, mellow-like odor that can be combined with rose grass, pecan oil and Peru balsam. Tolu balsam, Gurjun balsam, Benzoin resin, and Elemi resin are accompanied by a harmonious honey fragrance.
Cuban balms are used in care products; they are mainly used in skin lotions, anti-inflammatory creams, anti-dandruff, shampoos to treat scalp infections, and moisturizers that restore hair shine. It is also an acne agent (healing wounds).
This tree is shiny, wood is decadent and low-permeability, very suitable for construction and is durable. It is used in the manufacture of wood carbon and masts for shipbuilding, slats, door frames and window floors. The industry is mainly used in varnish, paint, porcelain solvent and other products. Generally, it takes 30 to 50 years.
Cuban balsam bark tea is often used as an anti-inflammatory drug. It is also one of the main components of cough syrup.
Recent studies by the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil and the University of Vitosha Federal University show that Cuban balsam has the potential to prevent periodontal disease. Also used for mouthwash (15 drops of resin diluted in warm water) as a treatment for sore throat and tonsillitis.
Note: Cuban balm is only taken internally at very small doses, usually only 5 to 10 drops (about 0.5 ml) daily 1 to 3 times. At high doses, it has been shown to cause nausea, vomiting, body heat and a measles-like rash.
A French dermatologist reported that these side effects may also occur with the absorption of Cuban balsam through the skin of sensitive individuals. However, it has officially been approved in the United States as a food additive and used in small amounts of food and beverage flavoring agents. It is also used as a perfume fixative.
According to UEM, Marin, Brazil, three types of Cuban balsam (Copaifera officinalis, Copaifera martii, and Copaifera reticulata) have antibacterial effects on bacteria, yeast, and dermatophytes. Studies have shown that, especially against Gram-positive bacteria resistant to Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), antibiotic resistance (AMR) inhibitory effect.
In 2002, Brazilian researchers clinical studies confirmed that Cuban balsam was used as a treatment for external wounds (very effective in animal studies), skin astringents, hemostasis, and acne (acne).
Description: http://www.te3p.com/vb/uploaded2/30893_11179386189.gif
[The main economically important tree species that produces Cuban balsam - resin is extracted from at least 9 species]
(1.) Medicinal Cuban balsam Copaiba balsam (Copaifera officinalis L.), the oil produced by this species is the most important cosmetic and medical application. Also known as bitter paprika oil. This species is called medicinal balsam and is mainly found in Brazil (Norte amazonas in the north, Roraima in Roraima, Colombia in Colombia and Venezuela in Venezuela).