Peak BMD at 30. Then ~1% loss per year after 40. Post-menopause? Up to 20% in 5–7 years
This model is an approximation, individuals may vary.
Peak BMD reached by age 30
~1% decline per year after age 40
Postmenopausal women: up to 20% loss in first 5–7 years
Low calcium, D deficiency, inactivity accelerate collapse
Your body loses ~1–1.5% collagen per year starting in your early 20's. By 40, you’ve lost 25–30%. Menopause accelerates it — up to 30% in 5 years
This model is an approximation, individuals may vary.
Starting in our mid-20s, collagen production declines 1–1.5% per year
By age 40, most have lost 25–30%
Menopause can accelerate loss — up to 30% in the first 5 years
Sufficient intake slows degradation, supports skin, joints, connective tissue
Peak muscle mass at 30–40. Then ~1% loss per year. After 60? It accelerates — leading to sarcopenia, falls, and frailty.
This model is an approximation, individuals may vary.
Peak muscle mass between 30–40
~1% decline per year after 40 — accelerates after 60
Sarcopenia = reduced strength, mobility, higher fall risk, metabolic issues
Sufficient protein preserves muscle quality, independence, health into older age
Process: Low-temperature enzymatic hydrolysis — preserves bioactivity
Testing: Third-party verified for heavy metals, microbiology, potency
Studies: Reduces bone loss markers (CTX) by 20–30% in 6 months
— Osteoporosis International, 2018–2021