Let us take Wintergreen oil as an example. The acute oral rat LD50 is 1.2. In humans, however, methyl salicylate does appear to be more toxic. Given the numbers of fatalities in years past, with the amount ingested being known in a number of cases, we can estimate a human LD50 of 0.3. For a 60 kg adult, this would translate to the ingestion of about 18 grams. (5)
Now, let us say that we want to apply a 2.5% dilution of Wintergreen oil to our sore lower back. We then apply 1 mL of this preparation...
http://www.agoraindex.org/Frag_Dem/toxicitymyths.html1mL x 2.5% = approximately 0.025 grams of methyl salicylate.
0.025 gms ö 18 gms (LD50 dose) = 0.00139 or 0.139%.
Hence, the applied dose is only 0.139% of the lethal dose - or more than 700 times less!
Of course, if we increase the amount applied of the 2.5% formula, we increase the dosage received. Hence, if we applied 10mL of the formula all at once, the dose would now be 0.25 grams or 250 milligrams. Putting this into perspective, even if the methyl salicylate was totally absorbed, this dose would represent the same amount of salicylate compounds as found in one tablet of aspirin...
Wintergreen and Sweet Birch essential oils are routinely mentioned as oils to avoid in Aromatherapy, even for trained practitioners. Members of the International Federation of Aromatherapists take a "vow" not to use Wintergreen essential oil. (6)
Yet, we have the strange contradiction of many methyl salicylate-containing topical products (containing from 10% to 30% methyl salicylate) being readily available to the untrained public - with very few negative side-effects reported (methyl salicylate, even used topically, is contraindicated in people taking the anti-coagulant drug, warfarin). (7)
Even with this relatively toxic compound (as I would suggest that any essential oil with an LD50 of less than 1.0 is), an effective anti-inflammatory preparation can be used with no potential for toxic effects.