Beauy is the sibling of Beaux from Meamo Labs, a poly-lactic-acid collagen stimulator built on PLLA (poly-L-lactic acid, 150 mg) paired with sodium carboxymethylcellulose (SCMC, 50 mg). PLLA is a more crystalline, longer-lasting form of PLA, so Beauy is positioned for more pronounced laxity, with a reported duration of about 20 to 24 months.

What is Beauy, and how does PLLA differ from PDLLA?

Both products are polylactic-acid collagen stimulators, but the polymer form differs. PLLA (poly-L-lactic acid) is more crystalline than the PDLLA in Beaux, which generally means it breaks down more slowly and can support collagen over a longer span. That difference is why Meamo Labs reports a longer duration for Beauy, roughly 20 to 24 months, and positions it for more visible laxity or ptosis rather than simple dryness.

Beauy uses the same uniform-microsphere idea, the “Smart SPDS” approach, and adds SCMC (sodium carboxymethylcellulose) as its second ingredient rather than the hyaluronic acid in Beaux. PLA itself has decades of medical history in absorbable sutures. As always, the positioning and duration figures here are manufacturer-reported, not independent clinical guarantees.

Log Notes. This explains what Beauy 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 PLLA build collagen?

Through the same neocollagenesis mechanism the PLA family shares. Published work on PLLA and PCL collagen stimulators describes how the polymer drives new collagen: as the microspheres slowly biodegrade, fibroblasts are signaled to produce more collagen over weeks to months. The more crystalline PLLA simply tends to do this over a longer window, which lines up with the longer reported duration.

So the plain difference between the siblings is timing and target. Beauy (PLLA plus SCMC) reports the longer 20 to 24 month span and is aimed at more pronounced laxity; Beaux (PDLLA plus HA) reports a shorter span with added hydration for dryness. Same fibroblast mechanism, different tuning. The PCL-based Miracle sits in the same broad biostimulator family, which is why the tracking approach carries across all of them.

What should you expect, and what is worth tracking?

A slow, cumulative change on a dated timeline. Because PLLA works over a long window, the meaningful comparison is month over month across a planned course, not week to week. A consistent record beats memory here: photograph the same way each time, note each session, and watch firmness and texture over the months a collagen response takes.

This is exactly the kind of long course Dosefi is built to track. You add Beauy 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. If you are weighing it against the sibling, a consistent log is the only honest way to compare. The notes on peptides for skin add a complementary angle.

A grounded takeaway

Beauy is a PLLA-plus-SCMC collagen stimulator reported to last about 20 to 24 months, tuned for more pronounced laxity than its sibling Beaux. Expect slow, cumulative firming, keep a dated record, and let a licensed professional decide whether the longer-lasting PLLA option fits your skin. The official guide is attached.

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