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Health Canada NPN 80118998 270 mg Millet + 30 mg Wheat Extract with Ceramides per Softgel Dairy-Free · Gluten-Free · Soy-Free · Non-GMO Biotin May Interfere with Lab Tests - Read Before Use
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Orange Naturals Hair Bliss - Millet, Wheat Extract, Biotin | 30 Softgels

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$38.99 CAD ($1.30 / softgel)
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BrandOrange
Serving1 softgel per day with food
Licensed Natural Health ProductNPN 80118998
Quality StandardsGMP-compliant facility
CountryMade in Canada Made in Canada

About this item

  • CERAMIDES + MILLET FOR THE HAIR CYCLE: Each softgel provides 270 mg Millet extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum, standardized to 1% miliacin) and 30 mg Wheat extract (seed, Triticum aestivum, standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides) - take 1 softgel per day with food.
  • HELPS DECREASE HAIR LOSS: Helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle. Helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair.
  • ZINC, VITAMIN B6 & BIOTIN: Each softgel also delivers 10 mg Zinc (citrate), 1.4 mg Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxal hydrochloride) and 50 mcg Biotin to round out the formula.
  • BIOTIN CAUTION - READ BEFORE USE: This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests - tell your healthcare practitioner and laboratory that you take this product before any blood test.
  • MADE IN CANADA, LICENSED BY HEALTH CANADA: Formulated by Orange Naturals, developed by naturopathic doctors, and licensed under NPN 80118998. The label states this product is dairy-free, gluten-free, soy-free, non-GMO and yeast-free.

Customer Reviews

3.4 out of 5 · 3 global ratings
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Product Description

Hair Bliss with Ceramides - Millet, Wheat Extract, Zinc, B6 & Biotin for Hair

Orange Naturals Hair Bliss

Orange Naturals Hair Bliss pairs 270 mg Millet extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum, standardized to 1% miliacin) and 30 mg Wheat extract (seed, Triticum aestivum, standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides) with Zinc, Vitamin B6 and Biotin in every softgel. Developed by naturopathic doctors, this formula helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle, and helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair. This product also carries a real caution around biotin and lab test interference, see below. Licensed Natural Health Product NPN 80118998.

Douceur capillaire (Hair Bliss) d'Orange Naturals associe 270 mg d'extrait de millet (graine, Panicum miliaceum, normalisé à 1% miliacine) et 30 mg d'extrait de blé (graine, Triticum aestivum, normalisé à 0,1% glucosylcéramides et 0,1% céramides) avec du zinc, de la vitamine B6 et de la biotine dans chaque gélule. Développée par des médecins naturopathes, cette formule aide à maintenir des cheveux sains, améliorer la santé des cheveux et normaliser le cycle capillaire, et aide à diminuer la perte de cheveux en réduisant la chute des cheveux. Ce produit comporte aussi une mise en garde réelle sur la biotine et les tests de laboratoire, voir ci-dessous. NPN 80118998.

Hair Bliss lifestyle
Orange Naturals Hair Bliss
5 Real Actives - Millet, Ceramides, Zinc, B6 & Biotin

A Naturopathic-Developed Hair & Scalp Formula

270 mg Millet extract + 30 mg Wheat extract with Ceramides, plus Zinc, B6 and Biotin - one softgel daily, developed by naturopathic doctors

270 mg Millet + 30 mg Wheat Extract with Ceramides

Each softgel delivers Millet extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum, standardized to 1% miliacin) and Wheat extract (seed, Triticum aestivum, standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides) - take 1 softgel per day with food.

Developed by Naturopathic Doctors

Orange Naturals formulas, including this Hair Bliss, are developed by naturopathic doctors and made in Canada.

Advanced Ingredients, Superior Results

Millet extract, wheat-derived ceramides, zinc, vitamin B6 and biotin have each been studied for their role in hair follicle health and the hair growth cycle - and biotin carries a real, well-documented lab-test interference caution. Here is what the wider research explores.

Millet Extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum)

The primary plant extract in this formula, studied for stimulating keratinocyte proliferation and metabolism and supporting the hair growth (anagen) phase of the hair cycle.

270 mg per softgel, standardized to 1% miliacin

Wheat Extract (seed, Triticum aestivum) with Ceramides

A wheat-seed extract standardized for its ceramide and glucosylceramide content, lipids studied for supporting skin and scalp barrier hydration.

30 mg per softgel, 17:1 extract standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides

Zinc (citrate)

An essential trace mineral involved in normal hair follicle keratinization and cellular turnover; low serum zinc has been observed in several hair-loss conditions.

10 mg per softgel

Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxal hydrochloride)

A B-vitamin cofactor involved in amino acid metabolism, included alongside zinc and biotin in this formula's nutrient support for hair health.

1.4 mg per softgel

Biotin

A B-vitamin studied for its role in hair health; this product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests.

50 mcg per softgel

Orange Naturals Hair Bliss: Supplement Facts

Orange™Hair Bliss
English

Each softgel contains:

  • Millet (seed, Panicum miliaceum, std. to 1% miliacin)270 mg
  • Wheat (seed, Triticum aestivum, 17:1, std. to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides)30 mg
  • Zinc (citrate)10 mg
  • Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxal hydrochloride)1.4 mg
  • Biotin50 mcg

Non-Medicinal Ingredients: Non-medicinal ingredients: Purified water, sunflower seed oil, rosemary extract, white beeswax, sunflower lecithin, gelatin, glycerol, chlorophyllin.

Recommended Use or Purpose: Helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle. Helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair.

Recommended Dose (Adults): Take 1 softgel per day with food or as directed by a healthcare practitioner. Take a few hours before or after taking other medications or natural health products.

Cautions and Warnings: Consult a healthcare practitioner prior to use if you are pregnant or breastfeeding. This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests - tell your healthcare practitioner and the laboratory that you take this product before any blood test. Do not use if the safety seal is broken. Keep out of reach of children.

Actual product packaging and materials may contain more and different information than what is shown on our website. We recommend that you do not rely solely on the information presented and that you always read labels, warnings, and directions before using or consuming a product. This item is sold and shipped by Amazon.ca.

Français

Chaque gélule contient :

  • Millet (graine, Panicum miliaceum, normalisé à 1% miliacine)270 mg
  • Blé (graine, Triticum aestivum, 17:1, normalisé à 0,1% glucosylcéramides et 0,1% céramides)30 mg
  • Zinc (citrate)10 mg
  • Vitamine B6 (chlorhydrate de pyridoxine)1.4 mg
  • Biotine50 mcg

Ingrédients non médicinaux : Ingrédients non médicinaux : Eau purifiée, huile de graines de tournesol, extrait de romarin, cire blanche d'abeille, lécithine de tournesol, gélatine, glycérol, chlorophylline.

Usage ou fins recommandés : Aide à maintenir des cheveux sains, à améliorer la santé des cheveux et à normaliser le cycle capillaire. Aide à diminuer la perte de cheveux en réduisant le nombre de cheveux en phase télogène et en réduisant la chute des cheveux.

Posologie recommandée (adultes) : Prendre 1 gélule par jour avec de la nourriture ou selon les directives d'un praticien de la santé. Prendre à quelques heures d'intervalle de la prise d'autres médicaments ou produits de santé naturels.

Mises en garde : Consulter un praticien de la santé avant d'en faire l'usage si vous êtes enceinte ou allaitez. Ce produit fournit de la biotine en quantité pouvant interférer avec des tests de laboratoire diagnostiques - informez votre praticien de la santé et le laboratoire que vous prenez ce produit avant toute prise de sang. Ne pas utiliser si le sceau de sécurité est brisé. Garder hors de la portée des enfants.

NPN 80118998

270 mg Millet + 30 mg Wheat Extract with Ceramides per Softgel30 Softgels · 30-Day SupplyDairy-Free · Gluten-Free · Soy-Free · Non-GMOBiotin May Interfere with Lab Tests - Read Before Use

Help decrease hair loss and support a healthy hair cycle with Hair Bliss

Get Orange Naturals Hair Bliss with Ceramides on Amazon.ca - fast, protected delivery.

Get it on Amazon.ca

Why Orange Naturals Hair Bliss

270 mg Millet extract + 30 mg Wheat extract with Ceramides, plus Zinc, Vitamin B6 and Biotin per softgel - developed by naturopathic doctors, with a real biotin lab-test caution you should read before use.

270 mg Millet + 30 mg Wheat Extract with Ceramides

Each softgel delivers Millet extract standardized to 1% miliacin and Wheat extract standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides.

Helps decrease hair loss and support the hair cycle

Helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle. Helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair.

Simple once-daily softgel

Take 1 softgel per day with food.

Real cautions, developed by naturopathic doctors

Formulated by Orange Naturals and developed by naturopathic doctors. This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests - read the label. NPN 80118998.

Inside every softgel

270 mg Millet extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum, standardized to 1% miliacin) and 30 mg Wheat extract (seed, Triticum aestivum, standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides), plus Zinc, Vitamin B6 and Biotin - take 1 softgel per day with food.

Millet Extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum) 270 mg per softgel, standardized to 1% miliacinWheat Extract (seed, Triticum aestivum) with Ceramides 30 mg per softgel, 17:1 extract standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramidesZinc (citrate) 10 mg per softgelVitamin B6 (Pyridoxal hydrochloride) 1.4 mg per softgelBiotin 50 mcg per softgel

How to use it

Take 1 softgel daily with food

Adults: take 1 softgel per day with food or as directed by a healthcare practitioner.

Space it away from other medications

Take a few hours before or after taking other medications or natural health products.

A 30-day supply per bottle

Each bottle of 30 softgels provides a 30-day supply at the standard 1-softgel daily dose.

Read the cautions before you start

Consult a healthcare practitioner prior to use if you are pregnant or breastfeeding. This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests - tell your healthcare practitioner and laboratory before any blood test.

What the research says about this formula's ingredients

Educational summaries of published research on millet extract, ceramides, zinc, vitamin B6 and biotin generally; not product-specific claims. Orange Naturals Hair Bliss's own authorized use under NPN 80118998 is that it helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle, and helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair.

Millet & Wheat Extract Mechanism (This Formula's Own Actives)

A 2023 study found this product's millet-and-wheat extract complex elongated the hair growth phase in lab and animal models

Studying a complex of proso millet (Panicum miliaceum) and common wheat (Triticum aestivum) extract on human dermal papilla cells and a mouse model, researchers found it increased antioxidant enzymes and hair-growth factors (IGF-1, VEGF, FGF7) while lowering inflammatory cytokines, and elongated the anagen (growth) phase of the hair cycle.

Preclinical study (in vitro + animal model)
Choi et al., Nutrients (2023)
Millet & Wheat Extract Mechanism (This Formula's Own Actives)

A 12-week human trial found encapsulated miliacin reduced telogen (shedding-phase) hair density and improved scalp dryness in women

In a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind trial of 65 non-menopausal women with telogen effluvium, 12 weeks of oral supplementation with miliacin (the main triterpenoid in millet) encapsulated in polar lipids significantly reduced telogen hair density versus placebo, and scalp dryness and hair brightness improved more than with placebo.

Human RCT (n=65)
Keophiphath et al., Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology (2019)
Millet & Wheat Extract Mechanism (This Formula's Own Actives)

A lab study found miliacin stimulated keratinocyte metabolism and proliferation, especially combined with other growth-supporting nutrients

Testing miliacin, L-cystine and vitamin B5 (pantothenate) on human keratinocytes, miliacin alone increased both metabolic activity (to 162%) and cell proliferation (to 215%), with the combination of all three producing a synergistic 245% increase in metabolic capacity versus untreated controls.

Preclinical study (cell culture)
Hoeller Obrigkeit et al., Cutaneous and Ocular Toxicology (2006)
Ceramides & Skin/Scalp Barrier

A 12-week human trial found oral plant-derived ceramides reduced water loss through the skin barrier

In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 29 healthy adults, 12 weeks of oral supplementation with ceramides and glucosylceramides derived from wine lees significantly lowered transepidermal water loss (a marker of barrier integrity) compared to placebo, with no related adverse events.

Human RCT (n=29)
Sanjaya et al., Nutrients (2024)
Ceramides & Skin/Scalp Barrier

A study found an oral-plus-topical regimen increased skin ceramide content and improved moisturization more than topical treatment alone

In a randomized trial of 39 women aged 55-69, adding an oral supplement to a topical regimen produced a larger increase in skin moisturization (+23.6% vs +18.3%) and a greater rise in ceramides and triacylglycerols, the key lipids that hold water in skin, than the topical-only regimen.

Human RCT (n=39)
Colombo et al., Metabolites (2025)
Ceramides & Skin/Scalp Barrier

A review describes ceramide-based approaches as a core strategy for restoring a compromised skin barrier

Reviewing skin barrier dysfunction across contact and atopic dermatitis, the authors describe stratum corneum ceramides as central to barrier integrity, and identify ceramide-based interventions as a key emerging strategy for barrier restoration and reducing disease burden.

Review
Maeng et al., Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Research (2026)
Biotin & Hair Growth

A 6-month RCT of an oral supplement containing biotin among its actives increased hair density in chronic hair-shedding and pattern hair loss

In 80 adults with chronic telogen effluvium or androgenetic alopecia randomized to a daily oral supplement (containing biotin alongside L-cystine and other micronutrients) or placebo, the supplement group's hair density increased significantly more than placebo at both 3 and 6 months, and was well tolerated with no moderate or severe adverse events.

Human RCT (n=80)
Piquero-Casals et al., Skin Appendage Disorders (2024)
Biotin & Hair Growth

A 2025 review lists biotin among the nutrients addressed for female hair loss, while flagging its diagnostic test caution

Reviewing the causes and non-pharmaceutical management of female hair loss, the authors note that nutrient deficiencies (iron, vitamin D and other essential minerals) contribute meaningfully to hair loss, and specifically caution against excessive biotin supplementation due to its potential to interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests.

Review
Leavitt et al., Journal of Drugs in Dermatology (2025)
Biotin & Hair Growth

A case report shows biotin's role is causal, not just correlational: a child's alopecia reversed with biotin supplementation

A 6-year-old with congenital biotinidase deficiency (an inherited condition that prevents the body recycling biotin) presented with alopecia among other symptoms; biotin supplementation reversed the clinical picture, illustrating biotin's underlying mechanistic role in hair health in a genuine deficiency state (not evidence that supplementation benefits hair in people who are not deficient).

Case report
Alagappan et al., Cureus (2025)
Zinc & Hair Follicle Health

A case-control study found significantly lower serum zinc in patients with alopecia areata, worse with disease severity

Comparing 50 patients with alopecia areata to 50 matched healthy controls, serum zinc was significantly lower in patients overall and lower still in those with treatment-resistant disease, with an inverse correlation between zinc level and both disease severity and duration.

Case-control study (n=100)
Abdel Fattah et al., International Journal of Dermatology (2015)
Zinc & Hair Follicle Health

A 2024 case-control study found lower zinc, but not lower biotin, in patients with chronic telogen effluvium - an honest, mixed nutrient finding

Comparing 90 women with chronic telogen effluvium to 90 controls, zinc levels were significantly lower in patients, but hemoglobin, ferritin, vitamin B12, thyroid function, vitamin D, copper and serum/urine biotin levels did not differ between groups - suggesting nutritional deficiency is not present in every hair-shedding case, and zinc specifically stood out.

Case-control study (n=180)
Durusu Turkoglu et al., Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology (2024)
Zinc & Hair Follicle Health

A case report shows a child's hair regrew once zinc deficiency was corrected

A 10-month-old infant with acrodermatitis enteropathica (a genetic disorder of zinc absorption) presented with alopecia, dermatitis and diarrhea and markedly low serum zinc (0.19 mg/L); her hair regrew and skin lesions improved after zinc supplementation restored her serum zinc level to 0.62 mg/L.

Case report
Axirejiang et al., Frontiers in Medicine (2025)
Vitamin B6 & Nutrient-Deficiency Skin Conditions

A dermatology review groups vitamin B6 with zinc and biotin among the nutrients whose deficiency produces recognizable skin and hair changes

Reviewing nutritional diseases that present with characteristic skin eruptions, the authors describe how deficiencies in zinc, biotin, essential fatty acids, vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) and riboflavin can each produce distinctive dermatologic patterns, underscoring these nutrients' shared role in normal skin and hair-follicle health.

Review
Lakdawala & Grant-Kels, Clinics in Dermatology (2015)
Vitamin B6 & Nutrient-Deficiency Skin Conditions

A review of vitamins and minerals in hair loss situates B-vitamins alongside zinc, iron and vitamin D as modifiable nutritional factors

Summarizing the evidence on vitamin A, B, C, D, E, iron, selenium and zinc in non-scarring alopecia, the authors note micronutrients are major players in the normal hair follicle cycle and cellular turnover, while cautioning that large placebo-controlled trials are still needed to confirm supplementation benefits in people who are not deficient.

Review
Almohanna et al., Dermatology and Therapy (2018)
Vitamin B6 & Nutrient-Deficiency Skin Conditions

A classic nutrition study found vitamin B6 blood status is measurably affected by hormonal status, showing how readily this vitamin's levels shift

Studying a large population of women, this nutrition study found plasma pyridoxal phosphate (the active form of vitamin B6) was measurably decreased by oral contraceptive use, while supplementation raised blood levels of vitamin B6 and several other vitamins - an early demonstration of how B6 status responds to diet and physiology.

Human nutrition study
Prasad et al., American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (1975)
Hair Growth Cycle & Mechanism

A review maps how plant-derived actives (the same class as this formula's actives) can extend the hair growth phase

Reviewing plant extracts studied for hair loss, the authors describe how active compounds increase dermal papilla cell survival and proliferation and upregulate growth factors (IGF-1, VEGF, HGF, KGF), extending the anagen (growth) phase while easing the oxidative stress and inflammation that would otherwise push follicles into the shedding (telogen) phase.

Review
Choi et al., Molecules (2024)
Hair Growth Cycle & Mechanism

A review identifies oxidative stress as a key driver of hair loss and antioxidants as a counteracting mechanism

Summarizing the signaling pathways involved in hair follicle development, the authors describe oxidative stress as an important factor disrupting the normal anagen-catagen-telogen balance, and review natural antioxidant compounds studied for their potential to support hair growth through this pathway.

Review
Du et al., Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine (2024)
Hair Growth Cycle & Mechanism

A 2026 clinician review outlines the core signaling pathways (WNT, BMP, SHH) that govern hair follicle formation and cycling

This educational review for dermatology clinicians summarizes how WNT, BMP and Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) signaling in the hair follicle bulge and dermal papilla regulate the normal hair growth cycle, providing the biological foundation for evaluating any ingredient or therapy proposed to influence hair growth.

Review (CME)
Wyles et al., Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology (2026)
Micronutrients & Hair Loss (Broader Evidence)

A comprehensive review found serum zinc and vitamin D tend to run lower in alopecia areata, but called the overall evidence base still limited

Reviewing the literature on micronutrients in alopecia areata, the authors found serum vitamin D, zinc and folate levels tend to be lower in patients versus controls, while evidence for iron, vitamin B, copper, magnesium or selenium was conflicting or insufficient - and concluded that larger, prospective studies are still needed before routine supplementation can be recommended.

Review
Thompson et al., American Journal of Clinical Dermatology (2017)
Micronutrients & Hair Loss (Broader Evidence)

A review of eating disorders shows how visible hair and skin changes can flag underlying nutrient deficiencies

Reviewing the dermatologic signs of eating disorders, the authors describe how deficiencies in micronutrients including zinc, iron and vitamins A and C commonly manifest as hair loss, dry skin (xerosis) and brittle nails, illustrating the wider clinical link between nutrient status and hair/skin condition.

Systematic review
Rallis et al., Nutrients (2024)
Micronutrients & Hair Loss (Broader Evidence)

A review found hair loss is a recognized complication of the vitamin and mineral deficiencies that can follow bariatric surgery

Reviewing micronutrient deficiencies after bariatric surgery, the authors list hair loss among the clinical manifestations that can follow post-surgical vitamin, mineral and trace-element deficiencies, alongside anemia and ataxia, reinforcing the link between adequate micronutrient status and normal hair maintenance.

Review
Gasmi et al., European Journal of Nutrition (2021)
Biotin - Laboratory Test Interference (Safety)

A 2024 review names biotin among the assay interferences that can produce a falsely abnormal thyroid test

Reviewing interferences affecting thyroid function testing, the authors identify biotin (along with heterophile antibodies and certain other factors) as a cause of falsely abnormal thyroid immunoassay results in patients without any underlying thyroid dysfunction, recommending clinicians consider assay interference when lab results don't match the clinical picture.

Review
Al-Bahadili et al., Endocrine Practice (2024)
Biotin - Laboratory Test Interference (Safety)

A study measured exactly how much a single 10 mg biotin dose skews thyroid blood tests in real volunteers

Testing biotin's effect on thyroid assays both in vitro and after volunteers took a 10 mg biotin supplement, the researchers found significant interference in biotin-based assays (falsely elevated free T4, free T3 and total T3) within 2 hours of dosing, while non-biotin-based assays (TSH, total T4) were unaffected.

Human study + in vitro
McBride & Dasgupta, Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science (2023)
Biotin - Laboratory Test Interference (Safety)

A study confirmed how dramatically biotin supplements can distort common lab immunoassays, and tested a fix

Testing several manual and automated immunoassays, the researchers found that in the presence of high biotin, detected analyte levels dropped to 10-15% of the true value in some assays and were falsely elevated by over 500% in another - demonstrating why product labels caution that biotin can interfere with diagnostic testing.

Laboratory study
Nelson et al., Journal of Applied Laboratory Medicine (2022)

Customer Reviews

3.4 out of 5 · 3 global ratings
Read genuine reviews on Amazon →Available at Amazon

Frequently asked questions

What is Orange Naturals Hair Bliss and what does it do?

It's a softgel providing 270 mg Millet extract and 30 mg Wheat extract (standardized for ceramide content) per softgel, along with Zinc, Vitamin B6 and Biotin. It helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle, and helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair.

How do I take it?

Adults take 1 softgel per day with food or as directed by a healthcare practitioner. Take a few hours before or after taking other medications or natural health products.

Why does this product carry a biotin caution?

This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests (for example, some thyroid and cardiac tests). Tell your healthcare practitioner and the laboratory that you take this product before any blood test.

Who should consult a healthcare practitioner before using it?

Consult a healthcare practitioner prior to use if you are pregnant or breastfeeding.

What are the medicinal ingredients?

Each softgel contains Millet extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum) 270 mg, Wheat extract (seed, Triticum aestivum) 30 mg, Zinc (citrate) 10 mg, Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxal hydrochloride) 1.4 mg, and Biotin 50 mcg.

How long does one bottle last?

Each bottle contains 30 softgels - a 30-day supply at the standard dose of 1 softgel per day.

Is it vegan and allergen-friendly?

The softgel shell contains gelatin, so it is not vegan. The label states this product is dairy-free, gluten-free, soy-free, non-GMO and yeast-free.

Where do I buy it?

Use the orange button on this page - it takes you to the listing on Amazon.ca for secure checkout and fast delivery.

270 mg Millet + 30 mg Wheat Extract with Ceramides per Softgel30 Softgels · 30-Day SupplyDairy-Free · Gluten-Free · Soy-Free · Non-GMOBiotin May Interfere with Lab Tests - Read Before Use

Help decrease hair loss and support a healthy hair cycle with Hair Bliss

Get Orange Naturals Hair Bliss with Ceramides on Amazon.ca - fast, protected delivery.

Get it on Amazon.ca

Natural Health Product NPN 80118998. Helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle. Helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair. Consult a healthcare practitioner prior to use if you are pregnant or breastfeeding. This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests. The research summaries on this page concern the individual ingredients generally and are educational - they are not additional product-specific claims beyond this product's Health Canada-authorized use. Read and follow the label. Results may vary.

Important information

Safety Information

Cautions and Warnings: Consult a healthcare practitioner prior to use if you are pregnant or breastfeeding. This product provides biotin in amounts that may interfere with diagnostic laboratory tests - tell your healthcare practitioner and the laboratory that you take this product before any blood test. Do not use if the safety seal is broken. Keep out of reach of children.

Indications

Recommended Use or Purpose: Helps to maintain healthy hair, improve hair health and normalize the hair cycle. Helps to decrease hair loss by reducing telogen hair number and reducing shedding hair.

Ingredients

Medicinal Ingredients (each softgel contains): Millet extract (seed, Panicum miliaceum, standardized to 1% miliacin), 270 mg. Wheat extract (seed, Triticum aestivum, 17:1, DHE equivalent to 510 mg dry seed, standardized to 0.1% glucosylceramides and 0.1% ceramides), 30 mg. Zinc (citrate), 10 mg. Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxal hydrochloride), 1.4 mg. Biotin, 50 mcg. Non-medicinal Ingredients: Purified water, sunflower seed oil, rosemary extract, white beeswax, sunflower lecithin, gelatin, glycerol, chlorophyllin.

Directions

Recommended Dose (Adults): Take 1 softgel per day with food or as directed by a healthcare practitioner. Take a few hours before or after taking other medications or natural health products.

Legal Disclaimer

Actual product packaging and materials may contain more and different information than what is shown on our website. We recommend that you do not rely solely on the information presented and that you always read labels, warnings, and directions before using or consuming a product. This item is sold and shipped by Amazon.ca.

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