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The Best Essential Oils for Nerve Pain

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The Best Essential Oils for Nerve Pain
The most popular essential oils for nerve pain include: wintergreen, peppermint, helichrysum, spruce, lavender, and rosemary. These oils are the most recommended for helping people successfully improve their chronic nerve pain. Essential oils have the power to deliver specific beneficial healing properties from different plants in a highly concentrated and direct form to your body, which can quickly alleviate nerve pain effectively. When used properly they have been recognized for centuries for having therapeutic properties. What are the best essential oils for nerve pain?

Depending on the type of oil applied, the healing effects of essential oils are limitless, from antibacterial defense to relief of pain and even aiding in emotional therapy, and applying essential oils topically when diluted quickly attacks places of pain and inflammation. From a strictly scientific perspective, oils are extremely effective due to the 50 million smell receptors that are located inside the nasal passageways that connect directly to the brain’s limbic system, the area that is responsible for emotions and memories.

This list features the most popular essential oils for nerve pain. Vote up the best below.

http://www.ranker.com/list/best-essential-oils-for-nerve-pain/bunny-brinkman,

Helichrysum
When helichrysum is used as a massage oil it can significantly reduce the symptoms of joint pain. Helichrysum (also known as "immortelle") is useful for reducing inflammation, headaches, acne, promoting the healing of wounds or burns, detoxing and boosting the immune system, reversing the signs of aging in the skin, and fighting fungal infections. There are no known side effects to using the essential oil, but taking it internally can be toxic. It can be used topically or in a diffuser.
Rosemary
Rosemary Essential Oil (Rosmarinus officinalis) can be useful for aching muscles, arthritis, dandruff, dull skin, exhaustion, gout, hair care, muscle cramping, neuralgia, poor circulation, rheumatism, and headaches. It is best to avoid using it while pregnant or if you have epilepsy. It can be taken orally, used topically, and in a diffuser.
Ginger
Ginger Essential Oil (Zingiber officinale) is useful for nausea, morning sickness, indigestion, circulation, arthritis, muscle pain, and cardiac fatigue. There are no known side effects to using ginger, however, people who take blood thinners should not use it. It can be taken as a food grade supplement, inhaled, and diffused.
Balsam Copaiba
Balsam Copaiba reduces swelling that causes common joint pain when massaged directly on an area. It is useful for constipation, bronchitis, hemorrhoids, diarrhea, and bladder infections; it also helps in curing urinary tract infections. In high doses it can cause rash, stomach pain, itching, and redness. Pregnant women, people with cancer, liver, and kidney problems should avoid this oil. It can be used in a diffuser, taken orally, or used in foods as a spice.
Lavender
Lavender Essential Oil (Lavendula angustifolia) relaxes you and makes you more alert. It can balance any personality. Possible dangers of not using lavender properly are: irritation of the skin, allergic reactions, nausea, headache, chills, or vomiting. It can be applied topically or diffused in a room.
Clary Sage
Clary Sage Essential Oil (also known as Esalarea) can be useful for upset stomach, stomach disorders, kidney disease, and tumors when applied to the skin. There are no known side effects to using clary sage when taken in proper amounts. It can be taken internally (it aides as a flavor for food) and topically.
Frankincense
Frankincense Essential Oil (Boswellia carterii or Boswellia Sacra) carries much-needed oxygen into the brain and stimulates its limbic area, which includes the hypothalamus, pineal, and pituitary glands. It can be blended with all oils. 
Wintergreen
When wintergreen is diluted and applied topically it serves as a natural pain reliever. It can calm nerve pain and relax the muscles. It can be useful for headaches, minor aches and pains, stomach aches, gas, fever, kidney problems, asthma, nerve pain, gout, arthritis, menstrual pain, and achy joints. The oil is unsafe to take by mouth, and can cause ringing in the ears, nausea, vomiting, headache, stomach pain, and confusion. It can be applied topically to the skin or used in a diffuser.
Spruce
Spruce oil is a natural pain reliever when applied topically after being diluted. Most people recognize it for being able to specifically reduce back and joint pain. It is useful for arthritis, sciatica, bone pain, stimulate thymus and adrenal glands, rheumatic, sciatica, lower back pain and the immune system. Children under the age of 6 shouldn't use black spruce and repeated use could result in skin irritation (diluting it is recommended). It can be used as a food additive, applied topically, or diffused.
Peppermint
Peppermint is an excellent way to relax joint pain when diluted and applied topically. It can also ease headache tension when rubbed on the temples and gently massaged. Peppermint Essential Oil is useful for irritable bowel syndrome, indigestion, heartburn, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, morning sickness, cramps, gas, colds, coughs, imflammation of the mouth and throat, sinus and respiratory infections, headache, muscle pain, nerve pain, joint problems, and toothache. There are no known side effects to using peppermint oil, but mild skin irritation could be a factor. It can be taken internally, topically, and used in a diffuser.


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