NutraceuticalF

Bamboo Silica

Bamboo Stem Silica (Bambusa vulgaris)

Silica source with no AGA evidence.

FEvidence grade
1Claims evaluated
0Key human trials
0 / 5Strength for hair
Mechanism & evidence strength

How Bamboo Silica works — and how well we know it

Mechanism of action

Silica is incorporated into connective tissues; the hair claim is the generic 'silica supports keratin' inference.

Dietary silica
Route

oral

Typical dose

Variable.

Regulatory status

Dietary supplement marketed as a silica source for hair, skin, and nails.

Best for

Nothing AGA-specific.

Evidence distribution across 1 claims

In Silico
In Vitro
In Vivo
Ex Vivo
Open-Label1
RCT

Why the grade is F. No AGA evidence.

Evidence breakdown

Every claim, traced back to its source

We took every major claim made about Bamboo Silica and matched it to the specific experimental model behind it. Click a claim to see the model, the finding, and our assessment of how much weight it deserves.

1 claims · evidence-by-evidence breakdown

1
Open-LabelWeight: Low
No AGA-specific evidence
No evidence.
The experimental model

Absence of evidence.

The finding

No AGA trials of bamboo silica.

Our assessment

Filler.

Open questions

What's still missing from the science

  • Any.
Bottom line

Our verdict on Bamboo Silica

No evidence
Bamboo silica is included in supplements on the generic 'silica = strong hair' inference. No AGA-specific evidence exists.
Filler. Skip.
At Anagen

Not in our formulary yet

We don't carry this ingredient. We only formulate around actives where the evidence — and the safety profile — is strong enough to recommend with confidence. As the data matures, we may revisit.

Bamboo Silica: Evidence-Based Hair Loss Review | Anagen