Women/Beauty/Mobility

Evening Primrose Oil

Plant oil rich in GLA that may modestly help PMS and dry skin, mainly for adults seeking a niche women’s-health option.

Evening Primrose Oil

Evening Primrose Oil

44
score
C
evidence
Caution
risk
Quick Take

Mostly a niche option for PMS or dry skin; evidence is mixed, so stop after 8-12 weeks if nothing changes.

Evening primrose oil is a seed oil from Oenothera biennis that provides linoleic acid and gamma-linolenic acid (GLA). GLA is converted into compounds that can influence inflammatory signaling and skin-barrier lipids. Human studies most often examine PMS, menopausal symptoms, dry skin, and certain pain conditions, but results are mixed and effects are usually modest. It fits best as a time-limited trial for women with cyclical symptoms or adults with dry, rough skin.

Proven Benefits

01
May reduce PMS symptoms
02
May improve skin hydration
03
May improve neuropathy symptoms
04
May ease joint pain/stiffness
05
May reduce hot flash severity
06
May support cervical ripening

Protocol

Amount
1-3 g
Frequency
Once daily or split into 2 doses
When
With meals; consistency over 8-12 weeks matters more than exact timing.

Onset Time

6-12 weeks; PMS effects often need 2-3 cycles.

Who Should Consider

Women with recurring PMS across several cycles
Perimenopausal women wanting a nonhormonal trial
Adults with dry, rough skin despite basic skincare
People willing to trial a niche supplement for 8-12 weeks

How It Works

Its main active fraction is GLA, an omega-6 fat converted to dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid. That can alter prostaglandin and leukotriene signaling and may improve epidermal barrier lipids, which is why research focuses on cyclical symptoms, skin dryness, and inflammatory pain.

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