Comparing E209 - Heptylparaben vs E927B - Carbamide

Synonyms
E209
Heptylparaben
E927b
Carbamide
urea
Products

Found in 0 products

Found in 44 products

Search rank & volume
#46260 / mo🇺🇸U.S.
#4864.7K / mo🇺🇸U.S.
Awareness score

Awareness data is not available.

×193.06
over-aware

Search volume over time

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Interest over time for 3 keywords in U.S. during the last 10 years.

Popular questions
  1. Comp where to plug e209 cable?

    E209 is the E-number for heptylparaben, a synthetic paraben preservative (not permitted in EU foods); it isn’t a cable or plug.

  2. Doctor who e209?

    In food labeling, E209 means heptylparaben, a preservative not permitted in EU foods; it doesn’t refer to Doctor Who.

  3. How to charge razor scooter e209?

    E209 is heptylparaben, a food preservative (not permitted in EU foods) and unrelated to charging a Razor scooter.

  4. What does e209 mean on ambulance report?

    On food labels, E209 denotes heptylparaben, a preservative (not permitted in EU foods); it’s not a standard ambulance/EMS code.

  5. What does e209 member mean on ambulance report?

    E209 refers to heptylparaben in food contexts (not permitted in EU foods); “E209 member” on an ambulance report would be an unrelated internal code, not the additive.

  1. What is blood urea nitrogen?

    Blood urea nitrogen (BUN) measures the amount of nitrogen in your blood that comes from urea (carbamide, E927b), a protein-metabolism waste product; it’s commonly used to assess kidney function and hydration.

  2. What is urea cream?

    A topical product containing urea (carbamide) typically 2–40% that hydrates skin as a humectant and, at higher strengths, softens and exfoliates thick, dry, or scaly skin as a keratolytic.

  3. What is urea nitrogen?

    Urea nitrogen is the nitrogen portion of urea measured in clinical tests like BUN, indicating how much urea-derived nitrogen is in the blood.

  4. What is urea in def?

    Urea (carbamide, E927b) is a simple organic compound, CO(NH2)2, the main nitrogenous waste in humans, made synthetically and used in fertilizers, skin products, and as a food processing aid/yeast nutrient.

  5. What does urea do for skin?

    It draws water into the outer skin layers to moisturize (humectant) and, at higher concentrations, breaks down hardened keratin to smooth rough or callused skin (keratolytic).