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Betadzen t1_jbzbz9l wrote

Shows his own patches.

Trust me, this won't be painless. Also I strongly suppose that this research was conducted by a team of crocodiles that wanted humans under the hot sauce.

But, well, better than nothing.

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[deleted] t1_jbzfxt7 wrote

[deleted]

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ImpeachedPeach t1_jc0zfhn wrote

Here's a weird one, I'm not allergic to poison oak so I rubbed it on my psoriasis patches... no more psoriasis!

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Fixing_The_World t1_jc1iatw wrote

It's due to the antigen of poison oak distracting your immune system. These immune cells are distracted impeding the psoriasis.

If it works for you, it could be used in a medicinal way.

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[deleted] t1_jc1yoia wrote

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ImpeachedPeach t1_jc3x54n wrote

Nope, cured up all of my infection. Seems to take care of fungal infections too..

Ironically it's a wonderful plant for the few that aren't allergic.

Before you shower it off, rub dirt on the skin to take care of most of the oils.. this way it's not left any residue in the shower.

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[deleted] t1_jc46fi1 wrote

[deleted]

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ImpeachedPeach t1_jc5069s wrote

It just removed it.

I had it for years (and on my genitals..) as soon as I applied it, it vanished in a few weeks.

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Technical_Sir_9588 t1_jc0mgo4 wrote

The prior study that I read about used 8% patches so they had to anesthetize the area prior to application. The over the counter roll on from CVS is 0.15% and that burns hot enough.

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