That headline is another viral health myth dressed up as science.
The idea is that eating or using eggshells for knee “collagen” will rebuild joints. The reality is much more complicated.
🥚 What eggshells actually contain
Eggshells are mostly:
- Calcium carbonate (~95%)
- Small amounts of protein matrix
- Trace minerals
They do not contain collagen in a usable form for rebuilding joints.
🦴 The claim: “eggshells rebuild knee collagen”
This usually refers to supplements made from eggshell membrane (not the shell itself), sometimes marketed for joints.
Your knees are affected by conditions like:
- Osteoarthritis
- Cartilage wear and inflammation
Cartilage breakdown is not something that can be reversed just by eating calcium-rich material.
🧪 What science actually says
Possible mild benefits (limited evidence):
- Eggshell membrane supplements may contain small amounts of:
- Collagen-like proteins
- Glucosamine/chondroitin compounds
- Some small studies suggest modest joint pain improvement
But important limitations:
- Evidence is weak to moderate, not definitive
- It may help symptoms, not rebuild cartilage
- Ordinary eggshell powder = mostly calcium, not joint repair
⚠️ Risks of using eggshells directly
If people grind and eat eggshells at home:
- Risk of bacterial contamination (like Salmonella)
- Too much calcium → risk of kidney stones or hypercalcemia
- Poor absorption compared to supplements
🧠 What actually supports knee joint health better
Evidence-based approaches include:
- Weight management (reduces joint stress)
- Strength training / physiotherapy
- Anti-inflammatory diet
- Doctor-approved supplements (if needed), such as:
- Vitamin D
- Omega-3 fatty acids
- Glucosamine (mixed evidence)
🧠 Bottom line
- ❌ Eggshells do NOT rebuild knee collagen
- ⚖️ Eggshell membrane supplements may slightly reduce joint pain in some people
- ✔️ They are not a cure for arthritis or cartilage damage
If you want, I can break down what actually regenerates joint tissue vs what only relieves pain, so you can separate real treatments from viral myths.