Bamboo Silica
Bamboo Stem Silica (Bambusa vulgaris)
Silica source with no AGA evidence.
How Bamboo Silica works — and how well we know it
Silica is incorporated into connective tissues; the hair claim is the generic 'silica supports keratin' inference.
oral
Variable.
Dietary supplement marketed as a silica source for hair, skin, and nails.
Nothing AGA-specific.
Evidence distribution across 1 claims
Why the grade is F. No AGA evidence.
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
1Open-LabelWeight: LowNo AGA-specific evidenceNo evidence.
Absence of evidence.
No AGA trials of bamboo silica.
Filler.
What's still missing from the science
- Any.
Our verdict on Bamboo Silica
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.
Related treatments
How does Bamboo Silica stack up against its closest peers?
A genuine cause of reversible hair shedding in iron-deficient patients — but useless and potentially harmful if your iron stores are normal.
Read the breakdown →A botanical 5-alpha reductase inhibitor whose only high-quality trials (in BPH) showed no benefit over placebo; the positive AGA data are small and low-quality.
Read the breakdown →One small Malaysian RCT showed a hair-count increase. Never replicated. Used by Nutrafol to justify its tocotrienol content.
Read the breakdown →