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Writer's pictureRozialyn from Beauty Natural

16 Benefits of Mango Butter Can Offer You


Mango butter is the lesser-known cousin to shea butter and cocoa butter. We say “cousin” because it’s often used in the same context pertaining to skin and hair care.

What many do not realize — though it shouldn’t be too shocking considering its source — is that mango butter is edible. In fact, you may see it included in the ingredients of many over-the-counter chocolates.

That said, there are many questions surrounding mango butter: what is it? How is it made? What does it smell like? What is “refined” mango butter versus “unrefined”? And what’s this business about mango seed butter and “cold-pressed” mango butter?

In the following article, we will address questions like these and some major benefits associated with it. Let’s begin!

The Properties of Mango Butter

Mango butter is compared to cocoa and shea kinds of butter for its moisturizing qualities, or rather how it moisturizes. These three butter types can do their thing without leaving a greasy film. More on that in a moment.

Mango butter itself comes from the mango seed. So when you hear “mango butter” or “mango seed butter,” the terms are pretty much synonymous.

The primary method of extraction is from the seed itself and is made through cold-pressing. Cold-pressing uses a hydraulic press to rend fluids from a source object as opposed to heat or other methods.

Refined and unrefined butter are available. Refined butter incorporates additional chemicals and additives to achieve the desired effects and consistencies. Unrefined butter is whipped solely from the fats that are extracted from mango butter, resulting in a more raw substance.

Both forms are safe and sold over-the-counter, but if you do not prefer or trust the chemical-added manufacturing processes, you’ll want to stick with unrefined butter. These are the “safer” forms you will want to stick with if deciding to use it as an edible food source.

With aroma, you don’t want mango butter to smell like anything. A mild odor or none-at-all is the preferred state, and it will smell nothing like the mango fruit because, remember, it’s extracted from the seed before it has a chance to fully develop.

Storage and how to tell when it is ‘going bad’

If it exhibits a powerful odor, then it’s likely time to throw it out. To extend life, consider refrigerating. But keep in mind, this can affect consistency.

You can get about 18 months out of your mango butter from the time it’s purchased until the last dollop, though that shrinks to 4-6 months of heavy use when kept at room temperature.

In the next section, we’ll be examining the many benefits. If you have an interest in skin and hair especially, you’ll want to read on.

The Beauty Benefits of Mango Butter

The mango fruit itself is highly edible, and it contains several health benefits that can play into your health and wellness.

We’ll discuss some more common ones later in this piece, but for now, let’s focus on the primary reason you probably bought mango butter in the first place — great-looking hair and skin.

There are 16, in particular, that you won’t want to live without. Let’s continue!

1. A ‘Plumper’ Look

For the look and the elasticity of your skin, the word “plump” is a welcome compliment. Using mango butter regularly will ensure that your skin maintains that look. It does so thanks, in part, too high linoleic and oleic acid content.

It’s loaded with vitamin C. Aside from its clear protections for the immune system, vitamin C is prolific with generating collagen. It is collagen that carries most of the weight for providing that fuller look you want from a beauty product.

Dry skin is one of the most common conditions that mango butter can treat.

2. Treats Dry Skin

Dry skin is a common problem for many across the country, according to the American Academy of Dermatology. That’s partly because the human body slows oil production as it ages, resulting in the more dried-out skin.

Throw allergy seasons and colder temperatures on top of it, and you’ve got a perfect storm for itchiness, which only tears and damages the skin more.

Mango butter is highly absorbent, nourishing, and enriching the skin year-round. Regular application will keep your skin glowing, and it will ease the discomforting urge of clawing your legs to death during certain seasons of the year. (Looking at you, Old Man Winter.)

3. Ironing out Fine Lines and Wrinkles

Mango butter is valued for its fatty acid and mineral content and is a rich source of antioxidants. These qualities, and particularly its quantity of vitamin A, make it a popular anti-aging product.

It can both prevent and smooth out fine lines and wrinkles that create the weathered look we all must contend with as we get older.

4. Soothes Skin from Sunburn…

The environment is rife with stressors that can wear out and damage the skin. One of the most common is the sun itself. This can lead to “sunburns,” or stinging redness that overtakes areas of the skin exposed too long to UV rays.

Beyond just being uncomfortable and painful, sunburns also increases your risk of developing skin cancer, according to the website skincancer.org.

While there is an argument to be made for mango butter in relation to fighting cancer — thank you, antioxidants — it can at the very least take the sting out of the sensation and nourish the skin back to its normal level of health.

And with unrefined versions of it, you don’t have to worry about the underlying effects of additive chemicals.

5. …And Frostbite

The Centers for Disease Control notes that, from 1999 to 2011, 16,911 deaths occurred in the U.S., with an average of 1,301 per year because of exposure to excessive cold.

Frostbite is one of the many dangers that come from such exposures, and it can lead to long-term skin damage or even amputation.

Unless you live in locations with particularly harsh winters, this may not be a concern. And in extreme cases like the aforementioned, you need to seek immediate medical attention.

That said, mango butter can help skin damage from the cold and soothe the pain in much the same manner — and owing to the same reasons — as with sunburn.

Insect bites are another area where mango butter can help.

6. Calms Itching from Insect Bites

The same anti-inflammatory qualities that make mango butter a significant source of support when addressing sunburns make it useful for insect bites. Different species create different reactions.

You will not have the same reaction to a tarantula bite as you would a brown recluse spider, for instance.

While it’s possible, you wouldn’t need medical attention at all for the former — despite its horror movie size — you’d want to see a doctor for the latter.

Mango butter, or any other balm, can only do so much, so don’t expect it to stave off infection for more venomous insects and creepy-crawlies.

But if you need relief from the swelling and itching, it can do a lot to reduce inflammation and get you back to a normal state of health.

7. Also Hits Poison Ivy

Over four in five people are allergic to poison ivy, sumac, or oak. For most of us, the mere act of brushing up against it will cause splotches of itchy skin that can make it feel like slow, deathly torture.

You can get several chemical-added treatments that aggressively attack the infection, or you could just wait it out as most poison ivy rashes go away in about 7-21 days. But who wants to live with that?

Unrefined Mango butter is a more chemical-free alternative that can ease the inflammation.

8. Heals Minor Wounds

With mango butter, you also can use it on minor wounds to facilitate the healing process. This works especially well when mixing with essential oils like clove, eucalyptus, frankincense, and lavender.

Let’s be clear, though. This is for nicks, scrapes, and cuts. For deeper wounds, and this should go without saying, seek medical attention. Also, do not take it upon yourself to treat the wound without first discussing the best options with your doctor.

9. Moisturizes Hair

Mango butter’s high vitamin and mineral content combine to balance the production of sebum. This assists the scalp in two especially helpful ways.

For people with overly oily scalps, it acts as an effective absorbent substance. For those who deal with dry scalp, the absorption factor allows hydration without that aforementioned “greasy” quality.

What does that translate into for look and feel? It a) softens the hair, and b) coats the hair from environmental damages. That is why you can find shampoos made from mango butter in pretty much any health and beauty salon or anywhere that sells finer cosmetics. Try our Mango & Vanilla Body Butter.


10. Treats Eczema and Psoriasis

Eczema is a condition that affects just north of 10 percent of the U.S. population. Children especially are susceptible to it. It takes the form of rashes and flakiness with accompanying itchiness, usually around the “bendable” areas of the body (i.e., knees, elbows, etc., though not confined to those regions).

Psoriasis also is a common skin condition, producing around 3 million recent cases in the U.S. each year. It manifests in the form of red patches covered in thick and scaly skin.

Sufferers of psoriasis also may experience dry, cracked, and bleeding skin; itching, soreness, or burning; and swollenness or stiffness of the joints. Thickened nails may appear.

A mango butters topical can help in the repair of these damaged areas and tamp down the inflammation that occurs when the body reacts to either condition.

11. Works Well as a Cleanser

Besides its use in shampoo formulas, mango butter is used in several full-body applications through bar soaps and body washes.

It has ultra-moisturizing qualities, blends nicely with other ingredients, and is a milder solution for common skin irritations and conditions. Also, if you’re bothered by heavy scents, it has an odorless formula.

This is a benefit for the millions of Americans who experience fragrance sensitivities, which manifest through respiratory, nose, and eye symptoms.

12. Good Substitute for Other Allergy-Causing Butters

Do any search involving the words “mango butter,” and it will eventually lead you down a rabbit-hole that puts you in contact with shea and cocoa butter — more popular counterparts that cover many of the same bases.

However, cocoa and shea butter aren’t for everyone, and a not-insignificant number of people report allergic reactions each year.

Fortunately, mango butter is a great alternative for people who can’t tolerate others.

13. Improves the Appearance of Scars and Stretch Marks

Dealing with stretch marks is a problem often associated with pregnancy — for obvious reasons — but it’s also an issue that men and women struggling with weight gain have to contend with.

The unfortunate thing about stretch marks is that even if you do the work and lose the weight, the darn things hang around to make you uncomfortable with your progress.

Thankfully, there are several options that can help you conceal and improve the appearance of stretch marks. Mango butter is at the top of the list, but other options include:

· Cocoa butter

· Vitamin E

· Bio c-elaste

· Shea butter

There are other special formulas on the market that can be effective, but make sure you read ingredient labels so you know what you’re putting on your body.


14. Great Choice for a Lip Balm

During the colder months of the year, it’s common for the skin around lips to grow dry, flaky, and cracked. Sometimes, the lips will even split and bleed. This can be uncomfortable.

Our Sweet Orange lip balm is effective in fixing the problem, and a level of purity. And when you’re dealing with a minor open wound like split lips, it is a relief to have an option like mango butter in your pocket.

Mango butter is often used as a treatment for acne, especially when other medications fail.

15. Helps Prevent Acne

Acne is so common that it’s considered a rite of passage, of sorts, for teenagers expecting their first prom. We can all relate to wondering if that major blackhead will go away in the days leading up to it.

The hope is that if you can just get through high school, and it’ll all go away and pretty much take care of itself.

But what many high schoolers don’t realize is that acne is a problem that can follow you into adulthood, and in extreme cases, it can cause permanent facial scarring.

In fact, it is estimated that 80 percent of people ages 11-30 will experience acne at some point. The issue gets easier to deal with as your age because oil production slows.

The key to addressing acne is to find a solution that hydrates without clogging your pores, since acne is caused by blockages that become inflamed.

Mango butter has that consistency where other specially planned acne medications fail. That’s because it absorbs better through the entire surface area.

16. Edible Qualities That Play Into Skin and Hair Care

While this last point isn’t as much about mango butter directly, it produces a major impact that affects your health and beauty needs.

While mango, shea, and cocoa butter are not thought of as edibles, mango lends itself to consumption, at least in its pure form. As mentioned earlier, it is used in chocolates, and you can derive several benefits from taking it in that form.

Incorporating more of the mango fruit into your diet can help boost the benefits that you can get from the direct application of mango butter.

That’s because mangos are rich in the major vitamins, contain impressive fiber content, and feature helpful antioxidants like zeaxanthin, which is an especially effective vision enhancer.

Other ailments mango can help to address include:

Cancer: the antioxidant content of mangos make it effective for battling the effects of certain types of cancer. In mango butter form, it may help prevent or address skin cancers.

Cholesterol: elevated LDL counts can lead to clogged arteries, high blood pressure, and the development of heart disease. Heart disease is one of the top three major killers in the U.S., and it’s also a major issue internationally. Thanks to the high fiber content, we have known mangos to lower cholesterol. Consuming mango butter could have the same effect.

Skin: we’ve spent a lot of time discussing how mango butter helps the skin, and it’s logical that eating said butter could produce a similar effect. Even if that’s not the case, you can still get a skin benefit out of the mango fruit. That’s because eating it improves circulation throughout the body, and good circulation is good for the skin. Also, the vitamins and minerals in each bite of mango help with collagen production.

Diabetes: added sugars can lead to the development of diabetes, but “good” sugars (aka natural sugars) like what you find in mangos and their derivatives help satiate the body’s need for the fiber and vitamins needed to maintain healthier glucose levels without having to resort to medications.

Sexual activity: again, it’s all about circulation, circulation, circulation. Healthy sexual activity — that is, length and quality, depend on healthy blood flow. There’s a real love connection between the heart and the sexual organs, so foods that promote quality heart health have a positive effect on performance.

Digestion: good fiber content leads to easier digestion, but with mangos, it also helps to control poor food choice urges. If you’re getting the fiber you need and not mucking it up with added sugars and excessive eating, then your digestive system will work better.

Heatstroke: mango’s ability to hydrate and cool the skin and its stellar absorption qualities can prevent the development of heatstroke.

Immune function: the antioxidant content found in mangos (and mango butter) may assist the functionality of the overall immune system, thus helping you fight off infections or prevent them altogether.

Side Effects

While side effects with mango butter are rare—, it’s derived from one of the healthiest fruits known to humankind — there may be some who experience adverse reactions.

It’s a short list, but here are some more common reports:

· Nervousness

· More rapid heartbeats

· Increased urination

· Sleeplessness

You’ll notice that each of these shares something in common — we associate them with certain hyperactivity that can be brought on by overloading on sugar.

Mangos and mango butter are natural sources for sugar, so if you notice any of this happening, limit the use and monitor results.

Also, if you have any concerns beyond this, make sure you take them up with your doctor. Before signing off from this section, let’s just make one thing clear. Mango butter does not have any known risks for pregnant or nursing mothers.

Talk to your doctor to be sure, but if this is something you want to use before, during, or after your pregnancy, you should be ready provided there are no harmful chemicals added to the specific formula you’ve chosen.

Also, keep in mind that not all products are created the same. Mango butter is one option. You also can get powders and oils derived from the mango tree. Read labels and understand what you’re about to put in or on your body before doing so.

In Closing

Hopefully, this has helped you to feel more knowledgeable about the benefits of mango butter. Have you ever used it? What were the results you experienced? Share your comments below.


 

Meet Rozialyn from We 3 Girls

Rozialyn is a mother of two beautiful and creative daughters. Rozialyn started W3 Girls | Homemade Body Care Products because of both her daughters suffer from eczema. With no products working, she made products that would not only help them but be good for their bodies.

1 Comment


You are welcome! And I’m happy you found this post informative.

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