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More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of bergamot oil for these uses.
Bergamot oil is safe for most people in the small amounts found in food.
Topical use of bergamot oil might also increase your sensitivity to sunlight.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for bergamot oil.
It is the chemical in bergamot oil that causes phototoxicity.
There was a faint scent of bergamot oil.
Children: Do not use bergamot oil in children.
Some cologne/perfume contains bergamot oil as one of the ingredients (for the scent).
Bergamot oil is sometimes inhaled (used as aromatherapy) to reduce anxiety during radiation treatment.
There have been serious side effects, including convulsion and death, in children who have taken large amounts of bergamot oil.
The appropriate dose of bergamot oil depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
The blended tea sprayed bergamot oil which gives it the smell of a citrus fruit.
Bergamot oil has several active chemicals.
Developing evidence suggests that inhaling bergamot oil as aromatherapy does not help reduce anxiety in people receiving radiation treatment.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Do not use bergamot oil on your skin if you are pregnant or breast-feeding.
The best known tanning activator is psoralen which is an ingredient of bergamot oil.
One hundred bergamot oranges will yield about three ounces (85 grams) of bergamot oil.
Mr. Tourondel's current passion is bergamot oil.
Earl Grey tea, a blend which uses bergamot oil to flavour the beverage, is named after Grey.
In foods, bergamot oil is widely used as a citrus flavoring agent, especially in gelatins and puddings.
In the past, psoralen extracted from bergamot oil has been used in tanning accelerators and sunscreens.
In manufacturing, bergamot oil is used in perfumes, creams, lotions, soaps, and suntan oils.
Its odor is considered similar to that of the bergamot orange (the source of bergamot oil used to flavor Earl Grey tea).
The first record of bergamot oil as fragrance ingredient is 1714, to be found in the Farina Archive in Cologne.
Extracted from an inedible citrus fruit grown in Calabria, bergamot oil is what gives Earl Grey tea its distinctive flavor.