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Lubrimaxxx plain or original is a high quality based water based personal lubricant with a silky smooth feel and is 100% safe for use with condoms, toys, rubber and latex.
Lubrimaxxx plain or original is a high quality based water based personal lubricant with a silky smooth feel and is 100% safe for use with condoms, toys, rubber and latex.
About Personal lubricants
Specialised lubricants used during human sexual acts such as intercourse and masturbation, to reduce friction to or between the penis and vagina, anus, other body parts, or applied to sex toys to reduce friction or to ease penetration. Surgical or medical lubricants or gels, which are similar but not usually referred to or labelled as “personal” lubricants, may be used for medical purposes such as speculum insertion or introduction of a catheter.
Why use Lubrimaxxx Plain Water-based Lubricant?
- LUBRIMAXXXâ„¢ is one of the safest water based lubricants in the World (results published in the South African Medical Journal 14 January 2014)
- Condom and Latex Safe
- Closest to Human Cell Osmolality
- Non-Staining and Non-Toxic
- Edible – Safe
- Laboratory and Clinically Tested
- Each batch manufactured tested for TMA (Total Microbial Activity) before packaged
- Non-Irritability
- Oral, Vaginal and Anal Safe
- Colourless
Water-based personal lubricants are water-soluble and are the most widely used personal lubricants. The earliest water-based lubricants were cellulose ether or glycerin solutions. Products available today may have various agents added for even dispersal, moisture retention, and resistance to contamination. The viscosity of these products can be altered by adjusting their water content and concentration of cellulose or other gel-forming hydrophilic ingredient. Because water-based personal lubricants absorb into the skin and evaporate, most water-based lubricants have a tendency to dry out during use, but reapplication of the lubricant or application of water or saliva is usually sufficient to reactivate them. When the lubricant eventually dries out, it may leave behind a residue derived from the other ingredients in the formulation. This may require reapplication during sex, and/or removal of the residue with water. Some newer water-based lubricants are formulated with natural skin moisturisers, such as carrageenan, and may not leave a sticky residue after evaporation. Carrageenan has also been shown to be a potent inhibitor of human papillomavirus infection. Carraguard, an aqueous gel containing carrageenan developed as a microbicide, has been shown in some preliminary studies to inhibit HIV transmission, although results have been mixed. Scientists are testing whether anti-retroviral lubricants or gels can be applied to aid in the prevention of transmission of HIV.
Typical water-based lubricants, such as Lubrimaxxx plain, may be incompatible with sex acts that occur in water (such as in a bathtub, pool, or hot tub) as they can be dissolved or dispersed in water.
The Population Council, in a 2011 study, tested commercially available water-based sexual lubricants, and found that many damaged human rectal cells and that some of them – those containing polyquaternium-15 – appeared to actively increase HIV replication in cell cultures and therefore could raise one’s risk of HIV transmission.
Water-based ‘lubes’ have been recommended for use in safer sex because they do not weaken condoms like oil-based lubricants do. The researchers concluded: “Since it is the condom that is protecting users from HIV rather than the lube, condom users should still be encouraged to use water-based lubes because condoms are also more likely to break, and trauma to the rectal lining occur, with no lube”. They also cited silicone-based lubricants as a potential alternative, although they did not test any silicone lubes in their study. Lubricants and creams containing the spermicide nonoxynol-9 are known to be cytotoxic, as studies have shown the compound damages cells and makes users more vulnerable to HIV. A later study has validated the findings of this study for some water-based products’ hyper-osmolality causing some human’s cells damage, and better biocompatibility with low-osmolality water-based products and silicone-based products but failed to corroborate polyquaternium 15 having a role that binds HIV to rectal cells or increase HIV replication.
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