Beaux is a poly-lactic-acid collagen stimulator from Meamo Labs that pairs PDLLA (poly-D,L-lactic acid, 150 mg) with hyaluronic acid (50 mg). The PLA microspheres prompt fibroblasts to build new collagen gradually, while the HA adds immediate hydration. The manufacturer positions it for skin that is dry but not yet sagging, with a reported duration of about 12 to 14 months.

What is Beaux, and what is PDLLA?

PDLLA stands for poly-D,L-lactic acid, a form of polylactic acid (PLA). PLA is not new to medicine: it has decades of use in absorbable sutures, and the FDA recognized it as a safe compound in 1984. Beaux uses PDLLA microspheres described as uniform, roughly 30-micrometre spheres made with the manufacturer’s “Smart SPDS” technology, the idea being consistent particles for a smooth, even collagen response.

The HA component is what sets Beaux apart from a plain biostimulator. The PDLLA does the slow collagen work, while the hyaluronic acid offers immediate hydration, which is why Meamo Labs frames Beaux for skin that reads dry rather than lax. That dual setup is a manufacturer positioning, not a clinical verdict, so treat it as context for a provider conversation.

Log Notes. This explains what Beaux is and the general science, not how to use it. It gives no doses, reconstitution volumes, depths, injection points, or technique, all of which live in the official guide and belong to a trained professional. Nothing here is medical advice, and this is not a do-it-yourself procedure.

How does PDLLA stimulate collagen, and how does it differ from Beauy?

By the same neocollagenesis arc the PLA class shares. Published work on PLLA and PCL collagen stimulators describes how these polymers drive new collagen: as the microspheres slowly biodegrade, fibroblasts are signaled to lay down more collagen over weeks to months. Beaux’s PDLLA does this in the company of HA, giving an early hydration effect on top of the gradual firming.

The honest contrast with its sibling Beauy is the polymer form. Beaux uses PDLLA plus HA and reports a roughly 12 to 14 month duration, positioned for dryness. Beauy uses PLLA, a more crystalline, longer-lasting PLA, plus a different second ingredient, and reports a longer span for more pronounced laxity. Same collagen-building mechanism, different tuning, which is why the choice belongs with your provider. The PCL-based Miracle sits in the same broad family.

What should you expect, and what is worth tracking?

Gradual change on a dated timeline. The HA may give an early plumped look, but the collagen work shows up across a course and the months after. That makes a consistent record more reliable than memory: photograph the same way each time, note each session, and watch firmness, texture, and hydration month over month.

This is the kind of course Dosefi is built to track. You add Beaux as a treatment, log each session with its date and a photo, set the reminder for the next session, and watch your self-rated firmness and texture trends build over the cycle. For a wider view of collagen-supporting approaches, the notes on peptides for skin cover a complementary topical angle.

A grounded takeaway

Beaux is a PDLLA-plus-HA collagen stimulator from Meamo Labs, reported to last about 12 to 14 months and positioned for dry rather than sagging skin. Expect gradual firming with early hydration, keep a dated record, and let a licensed professional weigh Beaux against Beauy for your skin. The official guide is attached.

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