Hi Lindy, Your statement was that all products with glycerine need a preservative. I asked if you had any studies or reputable sources stating that, so that we could learn about this also.
Thank you for the link to the blog. One link references another blog and the other references a regulation on multi dose oral and injectable vaccines and allergy injections. I quoted the regulation below.
Im not sure where you got your information on glycerites or glycerine, but it is not correct.
Glycerites do not need and do not contain additional preservatives and can be stable for decades whether opened and used or not.
Liquid pharmaceutical drugs are preserved with glycerine in concentrations as low as 18% because glycerine is a preservative. This includes cough medicine which is often chugged right from the bottle by people sick with all kinds of bacterial nasties.
Genny, Thanks for the link. I was able to open it and it is talking about allergy injections. Here is the part of the Federal regulation on vaccines that it was referencing:
Products in multiple-dose containers shall contain a preservative, except that a preservative need not be added to Yellow Fever Vaccine; Poliovirus Vaccine Live Oral; viral vaccines labeled for use with the jet injector; dried vaccines when the accompanying diluent contains a preservative; or to an Allergenic Product in 50 percent or more volume in volume (v/v) glycerin.
Here is a quote from the FDA about cosmetics which states that a cosmetic containing more than 10% glycerol is self preserving:
Some cosmetics, i.e., those containing more than about 10% ethanol, propylene glycol, glycerol, etc., and cosmetics in self-pressurized containers, are self-preserving and are not likely to become contaminated with microorganisms.
So, i guess i am still wondering where the information came from that all products containing glycerine need a preservative because it attracts water and is a sweetener. I am personally back to this; I dont believe the products the OP asked about which would not normally support bacterial growth would with the addition of 10% glycerine. If they wouldnt support growth without glycerine, there is no reason they would with a little added in.
Thank you for the link to the blog. One link references another blog and the other references a regulation on multi dose oral and injectable vaccines and allergy injections. I quoted the regulation below.
Im not sure where you got your information on glycerites or glycerine, but it is not correct.
Glycerites do not need and do not contain additional preservatives and can be stable for decades whether opened and used or not.
Liquid pharmaceutical drugs are preserved with glycerine in concentrations as low as 18% because glycerine is a preservative. This includes cough medicine which is often chugged right from the bottle by people sick with all kinds of bacterial nasties.
Genny, Thanks for the link. I was able to open it and it is talking about allergy injections. Here is the part of the Federal regulation on vaccines that it was referencing:
Products in multiple-dose containers shall contain a preservative, except that a preservative need not be added to Yellow Fever Vaccine; Poliovirus Vaccine Live Oral; viral vaccines labeled for use with the jet injector; dried vaccines when the accompanying diluent contains a preservative; or to an Allergenic Product in 50 percent or more volume in volume (v/v) glycerin.
Here is a quote from the FDA about cosmetics which states that a cosmetic containing more than 10% glycerol is self preserving:
Some cosmetics, i.e., those containing more than about 10% ethanol, propylene glycol, glycerol, etc., and cosmetics in self-pressurized containers, are self-preserving and are not likely to become contaminated with microorganisms.
So, i guess i am still wondering where the information came from that all products containing glycerine need a preservative because it attracts water and is a sweetener. I am personally back to this; I dont believe the products the OP asked about which would not normally support bacterial growth would with the addition of 10% glycerine. If they wouldnt support growth without glycerine, there is no reason they would with a little added in.
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