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Dill Weed Essential Oil
Name: Dill Weed Essential Oil
Species: Anethum graveolens L
Part: Aerial Parts
Extraction: Steam Distilled
Aroma: Fresh and herbal, warm and spicy
Dill Weed Essential Oil 100% Pure
Name | Dill Weed Essential Oil |
Batch | AG622D7 |
Species | Anethum graveolens L |
Part | Aerial Parts |
Extraction | Steam Distilled |
Class | Ketone |
Source | India |
Color | Clear |
Consistency | Thin |
Note | Middle |
Aroma | Fresh and herbal, warm and spicy |
Blend Ideas | Bergamot, Cedarwood, Clary Sage, Fennel, Geranium, Ginger, Grapefruit, Lemon, Lemongrass, Lime, and Sweet Orange |
We source only pure essential oils.
Dill weed essential oil is an excellent addition to blends for occasional muscular pain due to its anti-spasmodic tendencies. Of course, you smell a little pickled when you use it . . . but it works. If you've ever tried the old wives' tale about drinking pickle juice for cramps, you know just how well it works. I much prefer using it in a roller bottle to drinking pickle juice for my cramping feet! An added benefit to this use is that dill is known to help repel insects, although it may not be as effective as something like lemon eucalyptus in this.
Properly diluted and rubbed on the tummy, dill weed essential oil can aid in digestion and decrease flatulence. Some have managed to regulate menstrual cycles with topical application. Inhaled, diffused, or used topically, it can have a calming effect in times of stress and may make a boring job easier to take. The antimicrobial properties of dill weed essential oil make it an excellent addition to a mouth rinse.
Note that the dill weed essential oil is the milder of the dill essential oils. While it offers much of the same benefits of dill seed essential oil, it's not the same oil.
With our pre-diluted oils . . . if diluted for kids is the highest dilution you see, it’s also the max dilution possible. Pre-diluted oils are in fractionated coconut oil.
1 review for Dill Weed Essential Oil
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Dill Weed Essential Oil Safety Info
According to Tisserand and Young, a max dermal dilution of 1.2% is necessary due to possible sensitization and this oil should not be used orally by anyone taking diabetes medications. There’s a higher chance of sensitization when oxidized so storage in a refrigerator is preferred. Dill Weed essential oil should still follow the safety guidelines below. ~ Source: Tisserand, Robert and Young, Rodney. Essential Oil Safety: A Guide for Health Care Professionals: Churchill Livingstone; 2 edition (2013). Reading the full profile for Dill Weed essential oil is highly suggested by your DeRu Staff.
***Please note that some websites state that this oil should be avoided during pregnancy or breastfeeding, but Tisserand and Young make no such statement in their book. We believe that some have mixed up the recommendations for another type of dill essential oil with this one. Dill seed essential oil from India carries warnings to avoid during pregnancy or breastfeeding . . . dill weed essential oil does not. Do due diligence before you choose to use this oil while pregnant.
While we’ve made this clear that we are selling this essential oil to use in your diffuser, your inhaler, or topically (diluted), it is a pure essential oil and can be used as such. With all essential oils:
Keep away from children.
Oral Safety is only given because many people have been told to take oils internally. Because several people look to us for safety advice, we feel obligated to offer those safety statements, although we do not believe anyone should be ingesting essential oils without being guided by an expert. Experts will take your medical history into account before they suggest oils for you to ingest, diffuse, or use topically.
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1. Anethum graveolens: An Indian traditional medicinal herb and spice
2. Antibacterial Effect of Dill Seed Oil Anethum graveolens Anethum graveolens
https://www.iasj.net/iasj?func=fulltext&aId=114911
3. Anti-mycotic and Anti-mycotoxigenic Properties of Egyptian Dill
https://www.google.com/amp/s/scialert.net/fulltext/amp.php%3fdoi=jas.2017.184.195
4. Chemical Constituents and Antibacterial Activity of Dill (Anethum graveolens) Essential Oil
5. Chemical Constituents of Essential Oil from Anethum sowa L. Herb (Leaf and Stem) Growing in Bangladesh
https://www.banglajol.info/index.php/BJSIR/article/viewFile/5721/4478
6. Chemistry and fungicidal activity of Dill Seed (Anethum graveolens L.) essential oil
http://krishikosh.egranth.ac.in/bitstream/1/5810001034/1/M.Sc.%20Thesis.pdf
7. Comparison the Effect of Anethum graveolens and Oxytocin on Induction of Labor In Term Pregnancy: a Randomized Clinical Trial
https://cdn.neoscriber.org/cdn/dl/59e50116-508e-11e7-8314-ef92d8440bab
8. Comparative Studies of Chemical Composition, Antioxidant and Antimicrobial Potentials of Essential Oils and Oleoresins Obtained from Seeds and Leaves of Anethum graveolens L.
9. Efficacies of four plant essential oils as larvicide, pupicide and oviposition deterrent agents against dengue fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti Linn. (Diptera: Culicidae)
10. Essential Oils of Anethumgraveolens L.: Chemical Composition and Their Antimicrobial Activities at Vegetative, Flowering and Fruiting Stages of Development
http://files.aiscience.org/journal/article/pdf/70060068.pdf
11. Hybrid nanosystem for stabilizing essential oils in biomedical applications
http://www.chalcogen.ro/1657_Saviuc.pdf
12. Laurus nobilis, Zingiber officinale and Anethum graveolens Essential Oils: Composition, Antioxidant and Antibacterial Activities against Bacteria Isolated from Fish and Shellfish
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/c744/510c9fdba0d0094b074af6bc14b2fad0bedb.pdf
13. Pharmacognostical, Pharmacological, Investigation on Anethum Graveolens Linn: A Review
https://www.rjpbcs.com/pdf/2011_2(4)/[57].pdf
14. Spasmolytic Potential of Some Medicinal Plants Belonging To Family Unbelliferae: A Review
https://www.ijrap.net/admin/php/uploads/1156_pdf.pdf
15. Trait Patterns and Genetic Resources of Dill (Anethum graveolens L.)
http://www.geneconserve.pro.br/site/articles/lib/pastaup/Anethum%20graveolens%20v2%20RefSS.pdf
16. Volatile compounds and antioxidant activity of the aromatic herb Anethum graveolens
http://applications.emro.who.int/imemrf/J_Arab_Soc_Med_Res/J_Arab_Soc_Med_Res_2013_8_2_79_88.pdf
17. Volatile Composition of Essential Oils from Different Aromatic Herbs Grown in Mediterranean Regions of Spain
Information provided has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
The International Federation of Aromatherapists does not recommend that Essential Oils be taken internally unless under the supervision of a Medical Doctor who is also qualified in clinical Aromatherapy. All cautions listed for individual oils do not include those cautions from ingestion.
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For educational purposes only.
shellyburkern (verified owner) –
I’m so excited to use this in pain blends for several friends. The scent is fresh and light—definitely reminds me of pickles—but in a good way. I appreciate the list of oils suggested for blending.