Saturday, March 29, 2014

Covering Up Grey Thin Hair With Caboki. Free Sample

Easy Solution for Hair Loss

Covering up grey thin hair with caboki. Free Sample:


In fact, Caboki bonds to your hair 200% stronger than the hair building fibers used by our competitors.
french ochre Naturally occurring mineral colorants
Natural, Mineral-Based Colorants From Mother Nature

Both the hair you've lost and the hair you have remaining were given their coloring by nature. Doesn't it make sense to use a hair replacement product that also uses natural ingredients for coloring?

After all, using harsh, artificial dyes can yield a garish, unnatural look. But using nature's natural colorings quite logically yield soft, very natural looking tones.

So we start with virgin Moroccan Gossypium Herbaceum. Its natural coloring is grayish white. And then we use our natural colorants to dye the fibers into the full range of colorings found in human hair.

And here we reap another benefit from our exotic Moroccan cotton. Thanks to the micro-structure of Gossypium Herbaceum, its fiber can easily be dyed with mineral-based colorants - iron oxides for example, harvested from nature, as shown on the right.

Our competitors use wool fibers in their products. But wool is difficult to dye. Before you can even begin to dye wool, it must first be processed with harsh chemicals (bleaches). Then it's dyed with the synthetic pigments used in human hair coloring the same synthetic dyes that many health experts now caution against using.

But for your health and for a more natural appearance, we deliberately chose fiber sources that do not require synthetic dyes.

The result? Caboki is the ONLY 100% natural hair building fiber on the market. It is free of synthetic dyes, fillers, preservatives and animal derivatives. It is hypoallergenic completely safe to use on even the most sensitive scalps.

Tuesday, March 04, 2014

Have You Heard the Buzz?

Hemp MLM is Breaking Records! By Invitation Only...And YOU Get INVITED


Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) has been the primary focus of cannabis research since 1964, when Raphael Mechoulam isolated and synthesized it. More recently, the synergistic contributions of cannabidiol to cannabis pharmacology and analgesia have been scientifically demonstrated. Other phytocannabinoids, including tetrahydrocannabivarin, cannabigerol and cannabichromene, exert additional effects of therapeutic interest. Innovative conventional plant breeding has yielded cannabis chemotypes expressing high titres of each component for future study.

This review will explore another echelon of phytotherapeutic agents, the cannabis terpenoids: limonene, myrcene, α-pinene, linalool, β-caryophyllene, caryophyllene oxide, nerolidol and phytol. Terpenoids share a precursor with phytocannabinoids, and are all flavour and fragrance components common to human diets that have been designated Generally Recognized as Safe by the US Food and Drug Administration and other regulatory agencies. Terpenoids are quite potent, and affect animal and even human behaviour when inhaled from ambient air at serum levels in the single digits ng·mL−1.

They display unique therapeutic effects that may contribute meaningfully to the entourage effects of cannabis-based medicinal extracts. Particular focus will be placed on phytocannabinoid-terpenoid interactions that could produce synergy with respect to treatment of pain, inflammation, depression, anxiety, addiction, epilepsy, cancer, fungal and bacterial infections (including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus).

Scientific evidence is presented for non-cannabinoid plant components as putative antidotes to intoxicating effects of THC that could increase its therapeutic index. Methods for investigating entourage effects in future experiments will be proposed. Phytocannabinoid-terpenoid synergy, if proven, increases the likelihood that an extensive pipeline of new therapeutic products is possible from this venerable plant.

LINKED ARTICLES Primary Source of Original Content

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