The Truth About Collagen: Creams, Powders or Marketing?

Why slathering collagen on your face is useless and what to do instead to keep your skin elastic.

Aevos Health Research

Research & Analysis

Collagen is the structural protein that holds our body together (skin, bones, tendons). With age, we produce less and degrade it faster. Hence the explosion of collagen products. But what does science say?

The Collagen Cream Myth

See a cream that says "with Collagen"? Save your money.
The collagen molecule is enormous (about 300,000 Daltons). The skin barrier is designed to keep out anything larger than 500 Daltons.
Slathering collagen on your face is like trying to push a sofa through the eye of a needle. It stays on the surface, hydrates a bit, but doesn't integrate into the skin structure.
Solution: Use Retinoids that stimulate your skin to produce its own collagen.

Supplements - Powders and Drinks: Do They Work?

Here the story is different. When you ingest hydrolyzed collagen (i.e., broken into small peptides), it's absorbed by the intestine.
Recent studies (meta-analyses) show promising results:

  • Improvement in skin elasticity and hydration after 8-12 weeks.
  • Reduction in fine wrinkles.

The Mechanism: It's not that collagen peptides go directly to fill the wrinkle hole. Rather, the high concentration of specific amino acids (, proline, hydroxyproline) in the blood signals the body that there's been "tissue destruction," stimulating fibroblasts to repair (produce new collagen).

The Enemies of Collagen

It's useless to supplement if you then destroy what you have.

  1. Sun (UV): The #1 collagen killer.
  2. Sugar: Through , sugar "stiffens" collagen fibers, making them brittle and breakable (deep wrinkles).
  3. Smoking: Reduces blood flow and oxygen to the skin.

Verdict: Collagen creams = Rejected. Hydrolyzed supplements = Approved (as support, not miracle). Sun protection = Mandatory.

Smoking, sun and sugar destroy your collagen. Take the test.

Lifestyle analysis

Frequently Asked Questions

It's a good dietary source of amino acid precursors of collagen, but the concentration is variable and difficult to measure compared to a hydrolyzed supplement.
No. Collagen is an animal protein. Vegan 'boosters' (vitamins and amino acids) that support endogenous production exist, but they are not collagen.
Yes, there's good evidence that hydrolyzed collagen can reduce joint pain in athletes and in osteoarthritis.
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