Collagen
is the most abundant protein in your body. It’s not only found in your hair,
but in your skin, nails, bones, joints, ligaments and tendons, organs and
tissues, and blood vessels. Needless to say, it’s in pretty much every nook
and cranny of the body.
Without proper collagen supplementation, our natural collagen levels decline
by about 1% each year—starting as early as our 20s. This is what can lead to
thinning, dry, slower-growing hair.
So how can collagen supplementation help?
"Collagen’s role in hair is mainly beneath the scalp," says Sanjay Batra,
Ph.D., regenerative medicine and hair loss expert, and co-founder of
WeThrivv. “More specifically, when your body digests collagen, the process
produces a lot of fragments of a peptide called glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine
(GHK),” explains Batra.
He goes on to say that “the GHK fragments link up with copper in your body to
form copper tripeptide-1 (GHK-Cu). GHK-Cu is well known in the hair loss
world, appearing in serums, administered in the form of injections, and taken
as a dietary supplement for many hair supplements.”
Supplementing with collagen may also increase the activity of fibroblasts—a type of connective tissue
cell found in your skin. These elongated, spindle-shaped cells send signals to
cells at the base of the hair follicles that are responsible for making new
hair, resulting in hair growth.
Note: Overstimulating the fibroblasts can actually trigger the cells at the
base of the hair follicles to stop making hair (1).