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Collagen

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Specifically for Tendonitis

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Why it works for Tendonitis:

Biology 101 (what tendons are made of): Tendons are ~60–80% type-I collagen by dry weight. Tenocytes make procollagen, which is processed into mature collagen fibrils. Vitamin C is an essential cofactor for proline/lysine hydroxylation—without it, collagen cross-linking and tendon strength suffer. ScienceDirect

Supplying the raw materials & signals: Hydrolyzed collagen/gelatin provides glycine, proline and hydroxyproline—amino acids enriched in tendon. Ingested collagen peptides appear in the bloodstream and have been shown (in vitro/ex vivo models using participants’ serum) to up-regulate new collagen formation when paired with brief loading exercise. ScienceDirect

Timing with rehab matters: A small randomized crossover trial (n=8) found that taking 5–15 g gelatin with vitamin C, then doing ~6 minutes of skipping 1 hour later, increased collagen synthesis markers and improved mechanical properties in engineered ligament models; the protocol repeated 2–3×/day with ≥6 h between sessions. This underpins the popular “collagen + vit C 30–60 min before loading” approach. eScholarship

How to use for Tendonitis:

Collagen is adjunctive to a progressive loading program (isometrics → heavy–slow resistance/energy-storage work). Use it to support tendon rehab, not replace it.

1) What to take

2) When to take it

  • 30–60 minutes before your tendon loading session (so peak peptide levels coincide with exercise-driven blood flow to the tendon). Space loading bouts by ~6 hours if doing multiple sessions/day. eScholarship

3) How often & for how long

  • Daily with rehab, typically 3–6 months, matching clinical trials: e.g., Achilles tendinopathy studies used 2.5 g specific collagen peptides twice daily + calf-strengthening for up to 6 months. MDPI

4) Example template

  • Morning: 10–15 g collagen + 50–200 mg vit C → 45 min later 5–10 min isometric/calves or tendon-specific load.
  • Evening: repeat (ensure ≥6 h since last bout). Adjust to your clinician’s program. eScholarship

Helpful references/guides:

  • AJCN study & commentary on dosing/timing. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
  • Achilles RCT protocol using specific collagen peptides (TENDOFORTE®) with exercise. MDPI
  • Registered RCT protocol in patellar tendinopathy adding hydrolyzed collagen + vitamin C to standard exercise (“JUMPFOOD” study). SpringerLink

Scientific Evidence for Tendonitis:

Direct tendinopathy data

  • Achilles tendinopathy pilot RCT (double-blind, cross-over): Specific collagen peptides (2.5 g, BID) + calf-strengthening improved pain/function and tendon vascularization versus placebo over 3–6 months. (Small n; needs replication.) MDPI
  • Patellar tendinopathy RCT (underway): Double-blind trial testing hydrolyzed collagen + vitamin C added to progressive tendon loading vs loading alone (study protocol published). SpringerLink

Mechanistic / supportive human evidence

  • Gelatin + vitamin C + brief exercise increased collagen synthesis markers and improved mechanical properties in engineered ligaments perfused with participants’ post-supplement serum (randomized crossover). Supports the timing strategy. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Training adaptation data (healthy tendons)

  • Randomized trials in healthy adults: 14 weeks of resistance training + specific collagen peptides increased patellar tendon cross-sectional area and stiffness vs placebo—evidence that collagen can augment tendon adaptation to load. (Not a treatment study, but biologically relevant.) Wiley Online Library

Broader syntheses (connective-tissue outcomes; not specific to tendonitis)

  • Systematic reviews/meta-analyses in sports medicine and musculoskeletal fields report promising but heterogeneous effects of collagen peptides on joint/connective-tissue outcomes, with generally good safety—while emphasizing the need for larger, higher-quality trials. SpringerLink
Specific Warnings for Tendonitis:

Evidence quality: Current clinical evidence for symptomatic tendinopathy is limited (small RCTs/pilots + ongoing trials). Collagen should sit beside proven care (graded loading, education, load management), not replace it. MDPI

Side effects: Generally mild—GI upset, fullness, unpleasant taste—have been reported. Stop if reactions occur. WebMD

Allergies/dietary restrictions: Avoid marine collagen if fish-allergic; avoid bovine/porcine sources for relevant allergies or dietary/faith reasons. Check labels. WebMD

Product quality/contaminants: Collagen is an animal-derived supplement; quality varies. Independent testing has flagged detectable heavy metals in a proportion of retail collagen powders (Clean Label Project/OCA white paper). Prefer brands with third-party testing (e.g., ISO-accredited labs) and, in Australia, products that comply with TGA requirements if marketed as therapeutic goods. Clean Label Project

Medication/condition cautions: Data on drug interactions are sparse; if you’re pregnant, breastfeeding, have kidney/liver disease, or are on multiple medicines, discuss with your clinician first. (General medical guidance on collagen supplements and uncertainties.) Mayo Clinic News Network

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

Collagen is the most abundant protein in the human body, making up roughly 30% of total protein content. It serves as a primary structural component in connective tissues such as skin, tendons, cartilage, bones, ligaments, and blood vessels. In essence, collagen provides strength, elasticity, and structure to various tissues and organs.

It exists in several forms, with at least 28 known types, though Types I, II, and III are the most common:

  • Type I: Found in skin, bones, tendons, and ligaments; responsible for tensile strength and elasticity.
  • Type II: Found in cartilage; provides cushioning in joints.
  • Type III: Found in skin, muscles, and blood vessels; often works alongside Type I for structural support.

The body naturally produces collagen from amino acids (mainly glycine, proline, and hydroxyproline), derived from dietary proteins and aided by nutrients such as vitamin C, zinc, and copper.

How It Works

Collagen functions as the biological scaffold that holds tissues together. Its strength and flexibility arise from its unique triple-helix molecular structure, formed by three polypeptide chains wound tightly around each other.

Here’s how the process works biologically:

  1. Synthesis: Collagen is produced by specialized cells called fibroblasts (in connective tissue) and chondrocytes (in cartilage). These cells assemble amino acids into collagen precursors called procollagen.
  2. Modification: Procollagen undergoes enzymatic modification — notably hydroxylation, a vitamin C–dependent process that stabilizes the helix.
  3. Secretion and Assembly: The procollagen molecules are secreted into the extracellular space, where they are trimmed into tropocollagen, which then assembles into strong fibrils and fibers.
  4. Function: These fibers interlace to form structural networks that provide mechanical strength and elasticity, supporting tissue repair, skin firmness, and joint integrity.

As people age, natural collagen production declines, leading to visible signs such as wrinkles, sagging skin, and joint stiffness. Environmental factors — including UV exposure, smoking, and poor diet — accelerate this degradation process.

Why It’s Important

Collagen plays an essential role in maintaining overall structural integrity and function throughout the body:

  • Skin Health: It keeps the skin firm, elastic, and hydrated. Declining collagen contributes to wrinkles and loss of firmness.
  • Joint and Bone Support: Collagen cushions joints and strengthens bones by contributing to their matrix, reducing risks of joint pain and osteoarthritis.
  • Muscle Function: It supports muscle strength and recovery, as collagen is a component of muscle tissue and helps maintain lean mass.
  • Gut Health: It helps maintain the integrity of the gastrointestinal lining, potentially supporting digestive health.
  • Wound Healing: Collagen is critical for tissue regeneration, forming the matrix that new tissue grows upon during healing.
  • Vascular and Organ Support: It maintains the elasticity and structure of blood vessels and internal organs.

Considerations

While collagen is generally beneficial and safe, there are several important considerations:

  1. Natural Decline with Age: Collagen synthesis drops markedly after about age 25–30. Lifestyle factors such as sun exposure, high sugar intake, smoking, and stress further accelerate loss.
  2. Dietary Sources: Foods like bone broth, chicken skin, fish, eggs, and gelatin provide collagen or amino acids that promote its production. However, direct collagen from food is broken down during digestion; the body must reconstruct it into new proteins.
  3. Supplements: Collagen supplements (usually hydrolyzed collagen peptides) are widely used. Evidence suggests they can improve skin elasticity, hydration, and joint comfort, though results vary. Choosing reputable, high-quality products is key.
  4. Vitamin C and Co-Factors: Adequate vitamin C, zinc, and copper intake is crucial for collagen synthesis — without them, even with supplementation, the process is incomplete.
  5. Allergies and Source Concerns: Some supplements derive from bovine, porcine, or marine sources; individuals with allergies, religious dietary restrictions, or ethical concerns should check sourcing.
  6. Scientific Limitations: While studies show promising results, collagen supplementation is not a cure-all. Its effects depend on individual metabolism, baseline diet, and lifestyle.
  7. Sustainability and Purity: Environmental and purity concerns exist for animal-derived collagen, leading to the emergence of vegan collagen boosters (which support natural collagen synthesis rather than contain collagen itself).

Helps with these conditions

Collagen is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Leaky Gut Syndrome 0% effective
Tendonitis 0% effective
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Detailed Information by Condition

Amino-acid building blocks for mucosal repair. Collagen is rich in glycine, proline and hydroxyproline — amino acids important for connective tissue a...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 9 studies cited

Tendonitis

0% effective

Biology 101 (what tendons are made of): Tendons are ~60–80% type-I collagen by dry weight. Tenocytes make procollagen, which is processed into mature...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 5 studies cited

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