Lapolyque is a biodegradable collagen booster, the category sometimes called a biostimulator, supplied as a 200 mg powder reconstituted before use. The manufacturer materials list a particle size of about 30 to 60 micrometres and a reported duration near 18 months, used over a short course for gradual contour and wrinkle improvement. It is placed by a trained professional.

What is Lapolyque, and what does “biodegradable collagen booster” mean?

A biostimulator works differently from a filler. Rather than sitting under the skin to add instant volume, a biodegradable collagen booster is designed to prompt your own cells to make new collagen slowly as the material breaks down. Lapolyque’s materials describe it this way: a 200 mg product, reconstituted before use, with particles in roughly the 30 to 60 micrometre range, aimed at gradual volume, contour, and wrinkle softening.

One honest gap is worth naming up front. The guide I have describes Lapolyque as a biodegradable collagen booster and lists those physical specs, but it does not finalize the exact active polymer in the materials available to me. So the specific polymer is a fair question to bring to your provider rather than something to assume.

Log Notes. This explains what Lapolyque is and the general biostimulator 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 a biostimulator like this build collagen?

Through a slow, controlled repair response. Published work on PCL and PLLA collagen stimulators describes neocollagenesis: as a biodegradable polymer is gradually broken down, it signals fibroblasts, the cells that make collagen, to lay down more over weeks to months. That is the general mechanism the biostimulator class shares, and it is why results are described as gradual rather than instant.

Lapolyque sits in that same family alongside the PCL-based Miracle and the PLA-based Beaux. Until the exact polymer is confirmed, treat any reported benefit as “studied for the ingredient class,” not a guarantee for the specific product or for you. The roughly 18-month duration and the three-session-a-month-apart course are figures the manufacturer reports, framed for your records, not promises.

What should you expect, and what is worth tracking?

Patience and a dated record. Because collagen builds slowly, the changes that matter show up across a course and the months after it, not on the day of treatment. That makes a consistent log far more useful than memory. Photograph the same way each time, note each session, and watch firmness and texture month over month rather than week to week.

This is the kind of multi-session course Dosefi is built to track. You add Lapolyque 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 want context on related collagen approaches, the notes on peptides for skin cover a topical angle worth comparing.

A grounded takeaway

Lapolyque is a biodegradable collagen booster with clear physical specs, a roughly 18-month reported duration, and an unconfirmed exact polymer you should ask about. Expect gradual change, keep a dated record, and leave candidacy and the procedure itself to a licensed professional. The official guide is attached for your own reference.

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