Nutrolin Skin & Coat - NEW with pump
Nutrolin Skin & Coat - NEW with pump
Nutrolin® SKIN & COAT
Nutrolin® SKIN & COAT dog food supplement helps nourish and protect your dog’s skin and improve coat quality.
- The patented fatty acid and antioxidant formula works efficiently on all coat types.
- For healthy skin and a beautiful coat.
- Contains high levels of essential fatty acids; linoleic acid plus gamma-linoleic acid (GLA) and stearidonic acid (SDA) to support the effects of linoleic acid to help enhance the natural protection of the skin.
- The daily recommended amount for a 20kg dog delivers 3840mg of essential fatty acids together with 20mg Vitamin E
- Helps improve the skin barrier function and maintains the moisture balance of skin to fight against allergens and other irritants.
- Supports renewal and health of skin, nails and paw pads. Customers report healthy, smooth, “tight” paws.
- Reduces risk of recurrent skin and ear infections.
- Hereditary nasal parakeratosis (dry, cracked noses) – especially common in Labradors – is improved so you can see a nice, moist, black nose again.
- Less shedding, more shine
- Rich in natural vitamin E.
- Contains no fish oil – salmon and fish oils do not contain the fatty acids that nourish the skin.
- Comes in a recycled aluminium flask to prevent oxidation. Flask is fully recyclable.
- Refrigerate once opened
What does Nutrolin Skin & Coat contain?
The product is a blend of three cold-pressed seed oils producing a patented essential fatty acid composition of 480mg/ml:
Patented formula |
Additives |
· Hempseed oil · Rapeseed (canola) oil · Linseed (flax) oil |
· Natural vitamin E (d-alpha-tocopherol) 2.5mg/ml · Stabilized with natural tocopherol extract |
Â
***More than one need? If your dog has both skin issues and other needs, you can feed one product in the morning and the other product in the evening. This is important so your dog gets the full effect of both Nutrolin products. Otherwise, the fatty acids in the seed oils of Skin & Coat and fish oils of the other products compete with each other in a dog’s metabolism***