Revaree Review: Do Vaginal Suppositories Work?

Revaree Review: Do Vaginal Suppositories Work?


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Disclaimer: None of the information in this article constitutes medical advice, and is just the opinion of the writer(s). We recommend that patients follow their doctor’s guidance in regard to vaginal health.

Revaree is a vaginal suppository sold by a brand called Bonafide that makes natural products for women’s health. A vaginal suppository is a medication that’s inserted inside the vagina, and the manufacturer claims that Revaree “provides powerful, hormone-free relief from vaginal dryness.”

But does Revaree actually have research-backed ingredients for treating vaginal dryness or are these just marketing claims? Does it contain any potentially harmful ingredients? Are vaginal suppositories even safe? And how do real users rate and describe the effects of this product?

In this article we’ll answer all of these questions and more, as we review the ingredients in Revaree based on clinical studies to give our take on whether or not it's likely to be effective for vaginal dryness.

We'll share our concerns about ingredient disclosures, feature unsponsored customer reviews and provide a cost comparison to show which retailer sells Revaree for the best price.

Ingredient Disclosure Concerns

Revaree ingredients

The ingredients in Revaree are shown above.

Hyaluronic acid sodium salt is the first-listed ingredient, and this is a different compound than hyaluronic acid.

Bonafide's marketing of this supplement describes hyaluronic acid, but the sodium salt of hyaluronic acid is sodium hyaluronate.

We urge the brand to clarify which compound is used, and be consistent between their marketing messages and ingredient disclosures.

Semi-synthetic glycerides is the second-listed ingredient, and there is no further explanation of what specific chemical compounds are used in this mixture.

This is a vague and unhelpful description. Why not just describe the specific ingredients used? What specific semi-synthetic glycerides are included?

Revaree appears to have an active ingredient (either hyaluronic acid or sodium hyaluronate) and several inactive ingredients (the semi-synthetic glycerides) but reading the ingredient description label leaves us without a clear understanding of one specific ingredient in this product.

We recommend that consumers avoid health products without a clear ingredient list containing full active and inactive ingredient disclosures.

Some consumers may be allergic or sensitive to specific ingredients, and without this critical information it’s impossible to make an informed purchase decision.

Can Hyaluronic Acid Treat Vaginal Dryness?

Hyaluronic acid has been studied for its effects on vaginal dryness.

A medical review published in the Climacteric journal reviewed data from 17 clinical trials on hyaluronic acid for the treatment of vaginal dryness.

The researchers concluded that topical hyaluronic acid was effective in improving a wide range of vaginal symptoms including dryness, itching and burning.

A 2013 clinical trial compared the effectiveness of hyaluronic acid to a leading drug ingredient called estriol that’s commonly used for the treatment of vaginal dryness, and found that 49% of women using hyaluronic acid experienced improvements to vaginal dryness.

We conclude based on the available research that hyaluronic acid can treat vaginal dryness.

Based on these studies, we consider Revaree likely to improve vaginal dryness, although we cannot say so for certain because we can't find studies proving sodium hyaluronate to be effective for vaginal dryness (and remember, it's this sodium salt, not hyaluronic acid, that's included in Revaree).

Real People Try Revaree

A YouTube creator named “mrspa98” shared her experience using Revaree in a video with over 12,000 views:

A YouTube creator named Lauren Cranmer shared her experience trying Revaree as a part of a video on vaginal health.

We've timestamped the below video to start where she begins discussing Revaree:

Questionable Marketing Claims

Revaree questionable health claims

Bonafide’s website claims that Revaree is “Naturally powerful, scientifically validated” and features three data points shown above in bold which reference health claims.

One is that “women experienced an 86% reduction in vaginal itching and burning.”

We find these marketing claims to be highly questionable from an ethical and scientific standpoint, because these claims are not related to results from a clinical trial on Revaree, but rather related to results from clinical trials on hyaluronic acid.

The way this information is presented makes it seem to a reader (at least it did to us initially) that these are results from a clinical trial on Revaree.

These marketing claims are even more questionable when you keep in mind that Revaree contains sodium hyaluronate, which is similar, but not the exact same chemical compound, as hyaluronic acid.

We urge Bonafide to refrain from making marketing claims that their product is “scientifically validated” until their proprietary formulation is proven effective in a clincial trial published in a peer-reviewed journal.

What Causes Vaginal Dryness?

A YouTube video published by media outlet Cityline interviewed a doctor to discuss what causes vaginal dryness and how it can be naturally treated:

Our Clean Vaginal Health Picks

There are nutrients that have been shown in clinical studies to support optimal vaginal health. 

Oral supplementation with omega-3 fatty acids has been clinically shown to relieve vaginal dryness in some population subgroups, and clinically shown to reduce emotional symptoms during menopause.

Omega-3 Potency+ by MindBodyGreen is our top omega-3 supplement pick, because it provides a significant dose of omega-3 fatty acids per serving (over 1,700 milligrams).

Oral supplementation with Lactobacillus probiotics improved the ratio of healthy-to-unhealthy bacteria in the vagina in a clinical trial published in the Nutrients journal.

VSL #3 is our top probiotic supplement pick for vaginal health, because it contains four different strains of Lactobacillus probiotics.

Real Customers Review Revaree

Amazon is a better resource for unbiased customer reviews than a brand's website in our opinion.

Revaree has been reviewed over 2,000 times on Amazon at the time of updating this article, with an average customer review rating of 4.3 out of 5 stars.

A top positive review from a verified purchaser comes from a user named "Stephanie Knaus" who gave the product a 5/5 star rating, and claims it provided overnight relief:

"Iike that it works and doesn't cause me any issues. Every few days when I'm feeling like I need it, it gives relief overnight and I'm good for a while...I'm glad I found it."

A top negative review from a verified purchaser is written by a user named "Leslie" who claims to have experienced side effects:

"After the second time using it, I noticed a burn on the outside of my Vag, just in the general area and folds down there that was quite painful so I stopped. I gave it rest for about a month to let things heal, then tried it again...Same painful burn that took a week or so to heal."

Revaree currently has an average review rating of 4.3 out of 5 stars on Google.

Bonafide currently has an average review rating of 1.2 out of 5 stars on the Better Business Bureau (BBB) website, but the company responds to customer complaints attempting to resolve the issue, which is a sign of a high-quality brand.

Where to Get the Best Price

Revaree is sold at a variety of online retailers.

Here's a price breakdown for a one-time purchase at the time of updating this article:

Amazon: $62 (free shipping, link to official Amazon listing)

Brand website: $62 (free shipping, link to official brand's website)

Walmart: $56.95 (free shipping, link)

Walmart currently has a 8% better price than other online retailers.

Revaree Pros and Cons

Here are the pros and cons of Revaree in our opinion:

Pros:

  • Should relieve vaginal dryness
  • No unhealthy additive ingredients
  • High Amazon customer rating score
  • High Google customer rating score

Cons:

  • Ingredient disclosures missing critical info
  • Expensive
  • Doesn't appear clinically tested
  • Questionable marketing claims
  • May cause irritation in some users
  • Low BBB customer rating score
Stay up-to-date on our research reviews

Conclusion

Revaree should be effective for treating vaginal dryness, but we cannot say so definitively because we can only find clinical backing for hyaluronic acid, while Revaree contains sodium hyaluronate (which is a similar but distinct compound). 

The brand's ingredient disclosures are incomplete in our opinion, and Bonafide should specifically detail what the "semi-synthetic glycerides" they use are.

We disagree with the way Bonafide markets and makes claims of clinical efficacy about this product, given that this product does not appear to have been studied in any clinical trials.

The health claims on the Revaree product page made it seem to us (at first glance) that this product has been clinically tested, but the claims are based on existing clinical research that doesn't even use the same ingredient as Revaree (the research is on hyaluronic acid).

Revaree has relatively positive reviews on Amazon and Google, and negative reviews on BBB (but the BBB page has a very small sample size).

At the time of updating this article, Walmart has a better price on Revaree than other retailers.




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