Women’s Health News 

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Lead

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Background story

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root cause-opening

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Let me show you

what's actually been happening

inside your skin.

 

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Imagine your collagen —

the scaffolding that keeps

your skin firm and flexible —

as a mattress full of springs.

 

When those springs are healthy,

they compress and bounce back.

Your skin moves with your face.

It folds. It flexes. It recovers.

 

Now imagine someone

pouring sticky syrup

over those springs.

 

Not all at once.

A little every day.

For years.

 

The syrup is sugar —

normal, everyday blood sugar

that has always been

in your bloodstream.

 

Over time,

that syrup hardens

into a caramel shell.

 

The springs fuse together.

They can't compress anymore.

They can't bounce back.

 

Press your finger

along the line beside your mouth.

 

Feel that?

 

That's not aging.

 

That's caramel.

 

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This process has a name.

 

Glycation.

 

It's been documented

in medical literature since 1986.

 

It's the specific reason

your collagen stopped behaving

like collagen —

 

and started behaving

like something rigid,

crepey,

and set.

 

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Every serum,

every retinol,

every collagen cream

you've ever applied

worked at 0.3mm —

the surface of your skin.

 

Your glycated collagen —

the caramelized springs —

live at 1.5mm.

 

That gap —

1.2mm —

is the entire reason

nothing has ever reached them.

 

Most products

try to add new springs

on top of the old ones.

 

That doesn't fix the mattress.

 

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You cannot hydrate a fused bolt.

 

You have to dissolve

the rust first."

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mechanism-open

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So what does the solvent

actually do?

 

Let's go back

to the mattress.

 

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Remember the sticky syrup

hardening into caramel

on the springs?

 

The solvent acts

like a warm liquid

poured directly

onto that caramel shell.

 

It doesn't add new springs

on top of the old ones.

 

It doesn't try to hydrate

what has already hardened.

 

It dissolves the caramel

that was fusing the springs

together in the first place.

 

Once the caramel is gone —

the springs aren't

glued together anymore.

 

They can compress.

They can bounce back.

 

Crunchy becomes bouncy.

 

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Think of it like

a rusted door hinge.

 

You wouldn't paint over

a hinge that's rusted shut.

 

The paint sits on top.

The rust stays underneath.

The hinge still doesn't move.

 

First — you use a solvent.

WD-40.

Something that dissolves

the rust at the source.

 

Once the rust is gone —

the hinge moves freely.

 

Then you can restore it.

 

That's the sequence

every product you've tried

got backwards.

 

They were all painting

over the rust.

 

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For this to work —

the solvent has to

actually reach the caramel.

 

Not sit on top of it.

 

Every serum and retinol

you've ever applied

reached 0.3mm.

 

The caramelized springs

live at 1.5mm.

 

A solvent that stops

at 0.3mm

isn't a solvent.

 

It's more paint.

 

Which raises one question:

 

If nothing applied

to the surface

can cross that barrier —

 

how does the solvent

get through?

 

Not from the outside.

 

From the inside.

 

The solvent has to be taken

internally —

entering the bloodstream

and delivered to the dermis

from the inside out.

 

Not fighting the lipid barrier

from the surface.

 

Bypassing it entirely.

 

What's needed is something

fat-soluble enough

to survive that journey —

cross the lipid barrier

from the inside —

and reach the springs

at the depth

where the caramel

actually lives.

 

That's not complicated.

 

That's just chemistry."

 

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Product buildup

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Product-reveal-open

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It's called Glyco-Bond.

 

Not a serum.

Not a cream.

Not something for the surface.

 

The first supplement built

specifically to deliver

the fat-soluble solvent

that dissolves glycation cross-links

in the dermis —

 

at the depth where

the caramelized springs

actually live.

 

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By now you already know

what those springs are.

 

Glyco-Bond is the solvent.

 

The active ingredient

is Benfotiamine —

the fat-soluble form of B1

that has been sitting

in the biochemistry literature

since 1986.

 

Fat-soluble.

466 daltons.

Small enough to cross

the lipid barrier

that stopped everything

in the drawer at 0.3mm.

 

Capable of reaching

the dermis at 1.5mm —

 

where the caramel is.

Where the cross-links are.

Where the crepey skin,

the marionette lines,

the rigid lines

that felt structural

actually originate.

 

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No complex routine.

No new skincare steps.

No overhaul of anything

you're already doing.

 

Two capsules a day.

Taken with food.

 

That's it.

 

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Every product in that drawer

was addressing real symptoms —

at the surface.

 

Glyco-Bond addresses

the structural cause —

at 1.5mm.

 

That's not a better product.

 

That's a different category.

 

No serum, no retinol,

no collagen cream

was ever competing with this —

 

because none of them

were ever in the same layer.

 

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The timeline is honest:

 

Weeks one and two —

nothing visible.

Benfotiamine is accumulating

at the dermal level.

The caramel is beginning

to dissolve.

Nothing you can see yet.

 

Weeks three to six —

the texture begins to shift.

The lines that felt rigid

start to have movement.

The crepey skin

that no cream touched

starts to feel different

under the finger.

 

By week fourteen —

the springs that were

fused together

have enough flexibility

to behave like skin again.

 

Not new skin.

 

Your skin.

 

The kind that moves

when you press it.

 

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This isn't skincare.

 

This is structural repair —

 

built for you.

 

The woman who pressed

her fingers against

the rigid lines,

described them correctly,

was told it was just aging —

 

and was right

all along.

 

That's you.

 

This was built for you."

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testimonials

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"Picture fourteen weeks from now.

 

Week two — nothing visible.

You're taking it.

Trusting the chemistry.

The caramel is dissolving

below the surface

of everything you can see.

 

Week six —

you run two fingers

down your cheek

the way you always do.

 

The skin moves

differently.

 

Not dramatically.

Just — the resistance

that was always there

is less than it was.

 

You do it again.

Slower.

To make sure.

 

Week fourteen.

 

The car visor on a Tuesday.

Ordinary light.

You flip it down

because the sun is low.

 

You see your face.

 

You don't brace.

You don't recover.

You just —

flip it back up

and drive.

 

That's not a transformation.

 

That's your skin

behaving like your skin again."

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"Before we talk price —

remember what went into this.

 

Fourteen months of formulation.

A biochemist with seventeen years

studying why actives fail

to cross the lipid barrier.

Iterations that failed

and had to be rebuilt.

 

Benfotiamine — the fat-soluble form —

costs significantly more

to source and formulate

than the water-soluble version

available at any pharmacy.

 

We used it anyway.

 

Because nothing less

crosses the barrier.

 

This isn't a £20 gummy.

This isn't a collagen powder

that can't enter your skin.

 

It's fourteen months

of getting the right molecule

to the right layer.

 

That has a cost.

 

And it's probably less

than you're expecting."

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"One more thing

before the price:

 

Glycation doesn't pause

while you think about it.

 

The caramelized springs

harden a little more

every day without intervention.

 

The window for reversal

is real.

 

And it narrows.

 

Not because of a sale deadline.

 

Because of collagen chemistry."

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"You've already spent

thousands on products

that worked at 0.3mm.

 

One dermatologist consultation

runs $200-300.

One professional treatment session:

$150-400.

The serum in your drawer

that smelled expensive

and did nothing: $180.

 

Compare Glyco-Bond

to those numbers —

not to a $20 Amazon vitamin.

 

Those things weren't

in the same category.

 

Neither is this."

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close-regret

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adv-bridge

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