Beef Tallow in bulk
- Beef Tallow mimics our own skin cells, which is why Tallow cream is perfect for our skin.
- Tallow contains linoleic acid (CLA) and has natural anti-inflammatory properties.
- Beef Tallow is rich in minerals and vitamins A, D, E & K.
- Beef Tallow cream restores aging and damaged skin.
The skin's microbiome changes with age due to reduced sebum production, thinning skin, and changing pH levels.
The cream is made from beef tallow from green grazing cattle and contains plenty of vitamins A, D, E & K.
We sell Beef Tallow cream with 10% Ivermektin. Very unique product & very antiinflammitory.
BEFF TALLOW from grass-fed cows.
The base of our unique skincream is made from green-grazed beef tallow, coconut oil, jojoba oil, castor oil, beeswax, and essential lemon and frankincense oils.
This animal-based skin product balances the skin's microbiome and heals inflamed skin.
You get 2 travel containers (20 ml) to have in your travelbag.
Organic Swedish Beef Tallow.
This sebum-rich animal skin cream resembles the skin's properties, it balances dry and oily skin, moisturizes and gives elasticity.
The cream is made from beef tallow from green grazing cattle and contains plenty of vitamins A, D, E & K.
Together with other saturated fats such as coconut oil, jojoba oil, castor oil and essential oils, the cream balances and restores aging and damaged skin. It contains linoleic acid (CLA) and has natural anti-inflammatory properties.
The human skin with its microbiome (bacterial flora) is a complex ecosystem made up of millions of microorganisms, bacteria, fungi and viruses.
Some microorganisms are found on the surface and on deeper layers of the skin.
The skin's microbiome changes with age due to reduced sebum production, thinning skin, and changing pH levels.
These factors create a favorable environment for pathogens. Disruptions in the sebaceous gland ecosystem make the skin susceptible to eczema, skin allergies and inflammation.
BEEF TALLOW with 5% or 10 % Ivermectin
Skincare, with a focus on improving skin health through ingredients that are friendly to the skin's microbiome, is of growing interest.
The soil bacterium that became Ivermectin Although Ivermectin is known to treat parasitic infections in animals and humans, its potential is in dermatological applications very exciting and promising.
After all, the skin's microbiome plays an important role in maintaining skin homeostasis and contributing to the skin's barrier function to protect against environmental toxins.
Ivermectin counteracts infections caused by parasitic worms and microbes on the skin but is almost as well known for its anti-inflammatory properties. I
Ivermectin quickly and effectively relieves aches caused by oxidative stress. When Ivermectin is taken on the skin, the bioavailability is around 80%.
You can apply the cream directly to the body where you have pain, injury or scarring.
Dr William Makis
Canadian physician with expertise in radiology, oncology, and immunology. Governor-General's Medal, University of Toronto Scholar. Author of 100+ peer-reviewed medical publications.
Methylene Blue & Cancer Research
Dr. William Makis refers to studies with so-called repurposed drugs such as Methylene Blue, Ivermectin and Fenbendazole. The use of the "grandfather drugs", which can no longer be patented, is a cancer use that turns out to be successful, although few know about it.
Organic Beef Tallow and Ivermectin go well together! Pdf.
Beef Tallow mimics our own skin cells, which is why sebum cream is perfect for our skin.
Beef Tallow contains linoleic acid (CLA) and has natural anti-inflammatory properties.
Beef Tallow is rich in minerals and vitamins A, D, E & K.
Beef Tallow cream restores aging and damaged skin.
Satoshi Ōmura collects soil from the very place where the fateful sample of Streptomyces avermectinius (S. avermitilis) was taken in 1973.
In 1973, the Japanese biochemist and microbiologist Satoshi Ōmura discovered the soil bacterium Streptomyces avermectinius, whereupon he and his colleague William Campell were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine in 2015 for "their discoveries concerning a new therapy for infections caused by parasitic worms".
From broth collected from cultures of the organism, parasitologist William Campbell discovered a new family of parasites called avermectins. The antibiotic Avermectin was further developed into the miracle drug Ivermectin, which became known as the world's most important dewormer used to treat various microfilariae-associated parasitic diseases in humans and animals.
Since the start of the drug donation program, 1.5 billion parasite treatments have been approved with an extremely good safety profile and low side effects, now new areas are being discovered where the miracle drug Ivermectin works wonders.
The miracle drug Ivermectin continues to surprise and exceed scientific expectations.
When avermectins were discovered, they represented a whole new class of novel properties because they killed a wide variety of disease-causing organisms both inside and outside the body.