Sentences with phrase «lubricating effect»

Its Biocell Collagen II contains Hyaluronic Acid and chondroitin, as well as collagen, all designed to reduce inflammation in the joint and improve the lubricating effect of the joint fluid.
This simple beverage provides healing support to the colon due to its content of omega - 3 fats, soluble fiber and lignans, which are anti-inflammatory and have a lubricating effect.6 If you have leaky gut syndrome or irritable bowel, give this tea a try.
Importantly, the high levels of polysaccharides have a lubricating effect on joints, skin, the nervous system and the brain.
The lubricating effect helps separate the gum's hold on the hair, and makes it easier to remove.
In fact, men with all skin types will appreciate the products moisturizing properties that leave skin feeling supple and healthy and the lubricating effects that help a razor slide smoothly over the face and neck without getting caught on hairs.

Not exact matches

While the water under the Antarctic ice is not itself related to global warming, the suprisingly large amount of water, the surprising speed with which it moves, and its effect of «lubricating» the movement of the Antarctic ice, may affect how the ice sheets respond to warming.
While they may not clinically stimulate hair growth, some shampoos may have the desired effect of lubricating and plumping up the hair shaft thereby making the hair appear fuller.
It nourishes the body and lubricates the joints, benefits circulation and of course, softens skin, along with a host of other effects.
I was under the impression listening to Nadine Artemis that glycerine of all kinds was not healthy as a topical skin care ingredient because it for example temporarily plumped and lubricated then ultimately has the opposite effects where it shrivels up skin.
Tea lubricated Britain's industrial revolution and had far reaching effects on Britain's foreign policy (and remembering that a goodly portion of the world was colonized by Britain at the time, its influence was substantial - even a trigger for the American Revolution).
The problem with the paleoclimate ice sheet models is that they do not generally contain the physics of ice streams, effects of surface melt descending through crevasses and lubricating basal flow, or realistic interactions with the ocean.
Other factors would include: — albedo shifts (both from ice > water, and from increased biological activity, and from edge melt revealing more land, and from more old dust coming to the surface...); — direct effect of CO2 on ice (the former weakens the latter); — increasing, and increasingly warm, rain fall on ice; — «stuck» weather systems bringing more and more warm tropical air ever further toward the poles; — melting of sea ice shelf increasing mobility of glaciers; — sea water getting under parts of the ice sheets where the base is below sea level; — melt water lubricating the ice sheet base; — changes in ocean currents -LRB-?)
Putting my geologist's hat on, it is certainly plausable that (for instance) the passage of a low pressure system could bring forward an explosive volcanic eruption by a few hours; but extra precipitation reaching a magma chamber, or just lubricating faults around the chamber would be a bigger effect.
The worry has been that with further global warming such meltwater would increase and have a catastrophic effect on the ice sheet, lubricating its base and making it slide quickly into the ocean.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z