| Ingredient | Amount | % DV% Daily Value — how much of the recommended daily intake one serving provides, based on a 2,000 calorie diet. 100% = full daily need. Values over 100% are common for water-soluble vitamins (B, C) and generally safe. Values over 200% are highlighted. |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 25 Calorie(s) | — |
| Sodium | 20 mg | 1% |
| Total Carbohydrates | 2 Gram(s) | 1% |
| Vitamin A | 1000 IU | 20% |
| Vitamin E | 8.1 IU | 27% |
| Thiamine | 0.13 mg | 9% |
| Niacin | 7.5 mg | 38% |
| Vitamin B6 | 0.75 mg | 38% |
| Vitamin B12 | 0.56 mcg | 9% |
| Biotin | 2000 mcg | 667% |
| Hydrolyzed Collagen | 4000 mg | — |
| Antioxidant Blend | 3030 mg | — |
| Horsetail (Equisetum arvense) extract | 134 mg | — |
| Choline | 15 mg | — |
Other ingredients: purified Water, Ascorbic Acid, Folic Acid, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Sucralose, Blueberry extract, Carrot extract
This score evaluates label quality — dosage disclosure, transparency, cleanliness of inactive ingredients, and formula composition. It does not measure clinical efficacy, bioavailability, or third-party testing. Read full methodology
Same category, higher SupplementScore. Based on dosage transparency, label cleanliness, and formula quality.
The research summaries below are about the ingredients in general, drawn from published studies that often use different doses, forms, and populations than this product. A "strong" evidence rating for an ingredient does not mean this product will produce that effect — studied doses may be significantly higher or lower than what is contained here. Always verify doses against the Supplement Facts table above.
Essential for rhodopsin production in the retina. Deficiency causes night blindness — one of the earliest recognized nutritional deficiencies.
Critical role in maintaining mucosal barriers and immune cell function.
Essential for red blood cell formation. Deficiency causes megaloblastic anemia, confirmed by decades of clinical evidence.
Involved in myelin synthesis and nerve function. Adequate B12 status supports neurological health, particularly in older adults and vegans.
Cofactor in energy production pathways, but supplementation only helps if deficient.
Involved in neurotransmitter synthesis including serotonin and dopamine. Cofactor for over 100 enzyme reactions.
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All scores are algorithmically generated from publicly available label data (NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database) and reflect label quality — not clinical efficacy, safety, or product quality. This page is not affiliated with or endorsed by Applied Nutrition. If you represent this brand and believe any information is inaccurate, please contact us for a correction. Read full methodology
Alternatives are selected from the same category (Collagen) with a higher overall score. This is not a recommendation — always verify ingredients and dosages match your needs.
B6 is a cofactor in the transsulfuration pathway, converting homocysteine to cysteine. This is a separate pathway from the B12/folate remethylation route.
Protects polyunsaturated fatty acids in cell membranes from oxidation.
May help protect skin from UV damage when combined with vitamin C.
At pharmacological doses (1500-3000mg), niacin may improve HDL cholesterol. This effect is dose-dependent and not expected at typical supplement doses.
Essential coenzyme (NAD/NADP) in hundreds of metabolic reactions.
Limited evidence. May help in cases of biotin deficiency but most people get adequate amounts from diet.
Essential cofactor for carboxylases involved in gluconeogenesis, fatty acid synthesis, and amino acid catabolism.
Essential cofactor for pyruvate dehydrogenase and other enzymes in carbohydrate metabolism.
Some RCTs show improved skin hydration after 8-12 weeks at 2.5-10g/day of hydrolyzed collagen peptides. Results vary by collagen type and source.
May reduce joint pain in athletes and osteoarthritis patients, particularly type II collagen.