Ruticool cream composed of the listed active ingredients which are further explained in detail below:

Lidocaine

The significant drivers are increasing use of lidocaine ointment in cosmetic industry for pain relief and growing demand for lidocaine ointment as an anti-itching and pain relief medicine for insect bites, burns, skin scrape and minor cuts  etc.

Related Article: Ruticool Cream Use.

Calcium Dobesilate

The calcium dobesilate in the cosmetic composition has the effects of improving skin capillary circulation and reducing skin telangiectasia. The cosmetic composition can be used for preparing cosmetics for caring skin, preventing alopecia, promoting hair growth, protecting gums and strengthening teeth, removing facial blood streak and ecchymoses, and preventing and treating seborrheic dermatitis, rosacea and acne.

Hydrocortisone

Hydrocortisone is used to relieve itchiness related to insect bites, poison ivy and eczema, as well as reactions to cosmetics and chemicals. It may also reduce inflammation related to sunburn. Cortisone is intended for short-term purposes only. Medline Plus says hydrocortisone may be applied up to four times per day, but you should call a doctor if symptoms don’t improve within a week. The function of cortisone cream is to reduce irritation and improve overall discomfort.

Phenylephrine

Phenylephrine is used to treat nasal congestion and sinus pressure caused by allergies, the common cold, or the flu. Phenylephrine may be used to treat congestion of the tubes that drain fluid from your inner ears, called the eustachian (yoo-STAY-shun) tubes.

Related Article: Ruticool Cream Review.

Zinc Oxide

Zinc compounds were likely used by early humans as a paint or medicinal ointment, but their composition is uncertain. The use of pushpanjan, probably zinc oxide, as a salve for eyes and open wounds, is mentioned in the Indian medical text the Charaka Samhita, thought to date from 500 BC or before.  Zinc oxide ointment is also mentioned by the Greek physician Dioscorides (1st century AD.)  Avicenna mentions zinc oxide in The Canon of Medicine, which identifies it as a preferred treatment for a variety of skin conditions, including skin cancer, though it is no longer used for treating skin cancer.

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