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  2. What Is Lube Really? Our Experts Explain When and How You ...

    www.aol.com/lube-really-experts-explain-using...

    A lubricant, aka lube, is a liquid, made of silicone, water, or oil, used during sexual activity to reduce friction by making the genital skin feel smoother, either solo or with a partner, says ...

  3. The Best Lube for Women, According to Experts and Reviewers - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-lube-women-according-experts...

    Here's our look at the best lube for women. Meet the Expert. Maria Sophocles, MD, FACOG, NCMP is a board-certified OB/GYN with more than 25 years of medical experience. She is the medical director ...

  4. The Best Lube for Women, According to Experts and Reviewers - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-lube-women-according-experts...

    Best Single-Use Lube. ... Best Preservative-Free Lube. A team of women doctors formulated this silicone-based lubricant to counteract friction and enhance pleasure. Unlike water-based lubes, a ...

  5. Vaginal lubrication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaginal_lubrication

    Vaginal lubrication fluid is a plasma transudate which diffuses across the vaginal wall. Composition varies with length of arousal. [1]During arousal, vaginal lubrication, also sometimes called "arousal fluid", is produced.

  6. Playground (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playground_(company)

    Playground manufactures vegan and water-based lubricants, whose products combines three adaptogens: ashwagandha, black cohosh, and horny goat weed. [9] Each lubricant eventually mixes vitamin E, hyaluronic acid and bamboo extract in its composition aiming hydrating and soothing benefits, which eventually became the brand's "key differentiator", according Women's Wear Daily. [10]

  7. Nonoxynol-9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonoxynol-9

    Nonoxynol-9 is a common ingredient of most vaginal and anal lubricants due to its spermicidal properties. A 2004 study found that over a six-month period, the typical-use failure rates for five nonoxynol-9 vaginal contraceptives (film, suppository, and gels at three different concentrations) ranged from 10% to 20%.