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  2. The best muscle pain relief creams of 2025, according to ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-muscle-pain-relief...

    Tiger Balm Red Extra Strength Pain Relieving Ointment. $7 at Amazon. Best warming muscle pain relief cream Sombra Warm Pain Relief Gel- (4oz Jar) More options. ... it has great reviews. More than ...

  3. Talk:Tiger Balm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Tiger_Balm

    As a result, the so-called "extra strength" version you can get in your local drug chain -- Eckerd, CVS, Rite-Aid, etc. -- is 11% camphor and 10% menthol. Tiger Balm you can buy overseas (which is marketed my Haw Par Corp. and labelled "regular strength,) is 32% camphor... almost 3x as strong.

  4. Bengay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengay

    Bengay: Muscle Pain/Ultra Strength – 30% methyl salicylate, 10% menthol, and 4% camphor. [8] Bengay: Ice Extra Strength – 10% menthol. Bengay: Muscle Pain/No Odor – 15% triethanolamine salicylate. Bengay: Arthritis Extra Strength – 30% methyl salicylate and 8% menthol. [8]

  5. Tiger Balm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiger_Balm

    Tiger Balm Red Tiger Balm 1930s. A precursor to Tiger Balm called Ban Kin Yu (Chinese: 萬金油; lit.'Ten Thousand Golden Oil') was developed in the 1870s in Rangoon, Burma, during the British colonial era by the practising Chinese herbalist Aw Chu Kin, [1] son of Aw Leng Fan, a Chinese Hakka herbalist in Zhongchuan, Fujian Province, China. [2]

  6. Haw Par Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haw_Par_Corporation

    The assets included the brand Eng Aun Tong and Tiger Balm for liniment products, Sin Poh (Star News) Amalgamated that publishes newspaper in Singapore and Malaysia (assets were split into part of what is now SPH Media for Singaporean branch and Media Chinese International for Malaysian branch), as well as subsidiaries in Hong Kong, Taiwan and ...

  7. Aw Boon Par - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aw_Boon_Par

    Aw Boon Par (Chinese: 胡文豹; pinyin: Hú Wénbào; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Hô͘ Bûn-pà; 1888–1944) was an entrepreneur and philanthropist best known for introducing Tiger Balm. He was a son of Hakka herbalist Aw Chu-Kin. [1] [2] Aw was born during the British colonial rule.