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Sea Buckthorn Berry

Skin hydration, omega-7 supply, photoaging support and mucous-membrane integrity.

Evidence · Grade CSafety · Generally safe
Systematic review availableHuman trial evidenceTraditional useInteraction risk

Hippophae rhamnoides — a vitamin-C and omega-7 (palmitoleic acid) rich berry studied for skin hydration, elasticity and anti-photoaging.

Sea buckthorn is one of the few plant sources of omega-7 (palmitoleic acid) alongside an extraordinary density of vitamin C (often 5–15× orange), carotenoids, vitamin E and flavonoids. Berry and seed oils are used both orally and topically for dry skin, atopic dermatitis, mucous-membrane dryness and skin elasticity. RCTs show measurable improvements in TEWL (transepidermal water loss), hydration and elasticity scores.

Quick answer

What it is: Sea buckthorn is one of the few plant sources of omega-7 (palmitoleic acid) alongside an extraordinary density of vitamin C (often 5–15× orange), carotenoids, vitamin E and flavonoids.

May support:Sjögren's Syndrome, Skin Care, Beauty & Anti-Aging

Evidence:Evidence · Grade C

Safety:Safety · Generally safe

Evidence Summary

Evidence · Grade C

Multiple human RCTs (Finnish and Chinese groups) show improvements in skin hydration, elasticity, TEWL and atopic dermatitis symptoms with oral berry/seed oil.

Last reviewed · Jun 2026

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Why It Works

Omega-7 (palmitoleic acid) integrates into sebum and mucosal lipids; a dense antioxidant load (vitamin C, tocotrienols, carotenoids, flavonoids) quenches UV-induced free radicals and supports collagen.

How it works in more detail

Berry-pulp oil is uniquely rich (~30–40%) in palmitoleic acid (omega-7), concentrated in sebum and mucosal epithelia. Seed oil contributes a balanced ~1:1 omega-3:omega-6 profile. Vitamin C (up to 600–1500 mg/100 g), tocopherols, tocotrienols, beta-carotene, zeaxanthin and flavonoids (isorhamnetin, quercetin) reduce UV-induced collagen degradation in animal and in vitro models. RCTs (Yang et al. 1999) report improved atopic dermatitis and skin elasticity after 4 months of oral supplementation.

How to use

Always consult a qualified clinician.

Editorial guidance

Suggested dosage
Oral: 2–3 g/day sea buckthorn oil (pulp or pulp+seed blend), or 5–10 mL/day berry juice with meals. Topical: 1–2 drops of pure berry-pulp oil on clean skin — the deep orange color stains fabric.
Research dosage range
1–4 g/day oil; 5–20 mL/day juice; up to 5 g/day dried berry powder
Typical onset
4–12 weeks for skin hydration and elasticity; 8–16 weeks for mucous-membrane dryness.
Typical forms
Berry pulp oil capsules, Seed oil capsules, Whole-berry juice/puree, Topical oil/cream, Dried berry powder
Quality markers
Cold-pressed, CO2-extracted or supercritical-extracted oil preferred. Berry-pulp oil (deep orange-red) for omega-7; seed oil (lighter yellow-orange) for balanced essential fatty acids. Avoid solvent-extracted products.
Medication interactions
  • Anticoagulants/antiplatelets (warfarin, aspirin) — theoretical additive effect
  • Antihypertensives (may mildly lower blood pressure)
Avoid if
  • Allergy to sea buckthorn
  • Bleeding disorders (use with caution)
Pregnancy / lactation
Safe in dietary amounts. Concentrated supplemental doses during pregnancy/lactation lack robust safety data — consult a clinician.

Community tips

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Suggested dosage

Oral: 2–3 g/day sea buckthorn oil (pulp or pulp+seed blend), or 5–10 mL/day berry juice with meals. Topical: 1–2 drops of pure berry-pulp oil on clean skin — the deep orange color stains fabric.

General guidance — discuss specifics with a clinician.

Active medicinal compounds

Palmitoleic acid (omega-7), alpha-linolenic acid, linoleic acid, vitamin C, tocopherols and tocotrienols, beta-carotene, zeaxanthin, flavonoids (isorhamnetin, quercetin, kaempferol).

Nutritional contents

Per 100 g fresh berry: vitamin C 400–1500 mg, vitamin E 2–8 mg, carotenoids 30–60 mg, plus B-vitamins, vitamin K and trace minerals (manganese, copper). Berry-pulp oil ~30–40% omega-7; seed oil ~30% omega-3 and ~35% omega-6.

Traditional use

Used for centuries in Tibetan and Mongolian medicine for digestive, pulmonary and skin conditions — cited in the 8th-century Tibetan classic rGyud Bzhi. Russian and Central Asian folk medicine used the berry oil for burns, radiation dermatitis and frostbite.

Safety

Safety warnings

Generally very well tolerated. May have mild blood-thinning effect at high doses due to vitamin E and flavonoid content.

Avoid if

  • Allergy to sea buckthorn
  • Bleeding disorders (use with caution)

Medication interactions

  • Anticoagulants/antiplatelets (warfarin, aspirin) — theoretical additive effect
  • Antihypertensives (may mildly lower blood pressure)

Reported side effects

  • Mild GI upset (rare)
  • Loose stools at high doses
  • Allergic reaction (rare)
  • Orange skin tinge with very high carotenoid intake

Pregnancy & lactation

Safe in dietary amounts. Concentrated supplemental doses during pregnancy/lactation lack robust safety data — consult a clinician.

General guidance — discuss specifics with a clinician.

Evidence ecosystem

Scientific literature, clinical guidance, government sources, ongoing research, traditional use, and lived experience — grouped by source type and quality.

Overall grade (C)

Multiple human RCTs (Finnish and Chinese groups) show improvements in skin hydration, elasticity, TEWL and atopic dermatitis symptoms with oral berry/seed oil.

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Systematic Reviews(1)

Structured reviews of the full body of evidence (incl. Cochrane).

Very High Quality

Randomized Human Trials(1)

Controlled human studies with random assignment.

High Quality

Limitations: Studies are mostly small (n=20–100), 8–16 weeks long, and use proprietary oil blends, limiting cross-trial comparison.

This page is educational. Statements use phrases like "may support" and "has been studied for"because no remedy here is approved to cure, treat, or reverse any condition. Discussion happens on the ailment pages — community statistics here are derived from those reports. Always consult a qualified clinician.

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