If you have tried everything for persistent acne, redness or dull, inflamed skin and found topical products only take you so far, it is worth looking inward. A growing body of medical research points to the gut as one of the most significant, and most overlooked, drivers of skin health.
What is the gut-skin axis?
The gut-skin axis refers to the bidirectional communication between the gut and the skin. These are not two separate systems operating in isolation. Both are barrier organs with substantial immune function, and they are in constant dialogue via the immune system, the nervous system, and the endocrine system.
When the gut is functioning well, this relationship is largely silent. When it is not, the skin tends to be one of the first places the disruption becomes visible. Studies published in Frontiers in Microbiology and the British Journal of Dermatology have documented significant associations between gut microbiome composition and the incidence and severity of inflammatory skin conditions including acne, rosacea, eczema and psoriasis.2,5
Understanding this connection does not require you to think of skincare differently. It requires you to think more broadly about what skincare actually is.
How a disrupted gut microbiome affects the skin
The gut microbiome is the ecosystem of bacteria, fungi and other microorganisms living in the gastrointestinal tract. When this ecosystem is disrupted, a state known as dysbiosis, the consequences extend beyond the gut itself.
Dysbiosis is associated with increased intestinal permeability, sometimes called leaky gut, where the tight junctions in the gut lining break down. When this happens, bacterial fragments and other molecules that belong in the gut enter the bloodstream. The immune system responds by mounting a systemic inflammatory response. That inflammation does not stay contained. It manifests in the skin as breakouts, persistent redness, accelerated ageing, and conditions like rosacea and eczema that prove difficult to resolve with topical treatment alone.1
The microbiome connection runs both ways. Research shows that the composition of the gut microbiome influences the skin microbiome. Healthy gut flora, particularly Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species, is associated with better skin barrier function and lower levels of inflammatory skin conditions. The gut and skin are, in this sense, downstream of one another.
The role of lactoferrin in gut and skin health
Lactoferrin is a natural glycoprotein found in mammalian milk and a key component of the innate immune system. It is one of the most clinically studied compounds in the gut-skin space, with a clear mechanism of action and meaningful evidence behind it.
Lactoferrin has potent antimicrobial properties because it binds iron, an element that many pathogenic bacteria require to survive and replicate. By sequestering iron in the gut, lactoferrin creates an environment that is hostile to harmful bacteria and favourable to beneficial species including Bifidobacterium bifidum, Bifidobacterium longum, Lactobacillus reuteri and Lactobacillus rhamnosus.
The skin evidence is direct. A study by Uchida et al. found that bovine lactoferrin supplementation significantly reduced acne lesion count and reduced triacylglycerols in sebum by 31.1%.3 This is not a topical result. This is oral supplementation producing measurable change in skin at a systemic level, which is precisely what the gut-skin axis predicts.
L-glutamine: rebuilding the gut lining
The second key ingredient in OSKIA Lactoferrin+ is L-glutamine, an amino acid that serves as the primary fuel source for intestinal epithelial cells, the cells that line the gut wall. When the gut lining is compromised, whether by stress, poor diet, antibiotics or dysbiosis, L-glutamine becomes particularly important.
Research by Rao and Samak demonstrated that L-glutamine supplementation supports the integrity of tight junctions in the intestinal epithelium and reduces intestinal permeability.4 In practical terms, this means L-glutamine helps repair the gut lining, addressing the leakiness that drives systemic inflammation. It works upstream of the skin. Where lactoferrin helps rebalance the bacterial environment, L-glutamine helps restore the structural integrity of the barrier itself.
Together, the two ingredients address both the ecosystem and the architecture of the gut, which is why the combination is more meaningful than either ingredient alone.
OSKIA Lactoferrin+: intelligent skin nutrition from the inside
OSKIA Lactoferrin+ contains 200mg of bovine lactoferrin and 300mg of L-glutamine per capsule. The lactoferrin is sourced from fresh French cow's milk. The formula is vegetarian, natural, non-GMO and gluten-free.
This is OSKIA's philosophy applied to supplementation. Intelligent skin nutrition has always meant understanding what skin needs at a biological level and formulating accordingly, rather than chasing trends or adding ingredients for the sake of a longer label. The decision to combine lactoferrin and L-glutamine in a single supplement reflects a specific understanding of the gut-skin mechanism: address the microbiome and the barrier, and the skin often follows.
That said, gut health interventions are not a replacement for medical treatment of diagnosed conditions. If you have a diagnosed gastrointestinal condition or a serious skin condition under medical management, discuss supplementation with your doctor or dermatologist before starting.
How to think about inside-out skincare
There is a tendency to separate what we eat and supplement from what we put on our skin. The gut-skin research makes this separation harder to sustain. For anyone dealing with skin that does not respond to topicals as expected, or that clears up and then relapses, the gut is a logical place to investigate.
This does not mean abandoning your skincare ritual. It means recognising that the skin is a surface organ, and surfaces reflect what is happening underneath. Supporting the gut microbiome and barrier function with targeted supplementation addresses the conditions from which skin health either emerges or fails to emerge.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my gut health is affecting my skin?
There is no single diagnostic test available at home, but there are patterns worth paying attention to. Skin that flares around periods of high stress, after courses of antibiotics, after dietary changes, or that presents alongside digestive symptoms such as bloating, irregular bowel habits or discomfort may have a gut component. Inflammatory skin conditions, particularly acne, rosacea and eczema, are most commonly associated with gut-skin axis disruption in the research literature.
How long does Lactoferrin+ take to work?
Most people begin to notice changes in skin clarity and texture within six to twelve weeks of consistent daily use. The gut microbiome takes time to rebalance, and the downstream effects on skin take time to become visible. Consistent use over at least three months is recommended before drawing conclusions.
Can I take Lactoferrin+ with other supplements?
Yes. OSKIA Lactoferrin+ is generally compatible with other supplements. It can be taken alongside vitamin C, zinc, omega-3s and collagen supplements without issue. If you are taking prescribed medication or have a known health condition, check with your GP before adding any new supplement to your routine.
Is Lactoferrin+ suitable during pregnancy?
Lactoferrin is a naturally occurring protein found in breast milk and is considered safe for general adult use. However, as with all supplements, we recommend consulting your midwife or GP before taking Lactoferrin+ during pregnancy or whilst breastfeeding.
Should I change my diet as well as taking Lactoferrin+?
Supplementation works best alongside a diet that supports gut health. Practically, this means reducing ultra-processed foods and refined sugars, which feed pathogenic bacteria, and increasing dietary fibre, fermented foods and diverse plant foods, which support beneficial flora. Lactoferrin+ is not a substitute for diet but it does provide targeted support that diet alone may not fully replicate, particularly where the gut lining has been compromised or the microbiome has been significantly disrupted.
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Clinical references
- Bowe W, et al. "Acne vulgaris, probiotics and the gut-brain-skin axis." Gut Pathog, 2011.
- Salem I, et al. "The gut microbiome as a major regulator of the gut-skin axis." Front Microbiol, 2018.
- Uchida M, et al. "Effect of bovine lactoferrin on acne vulgaris." Nippon Shokuhin Kagaku Kogaku Kaishi, 2006.
- Rao R, Samak G. "Role of glutamine in protection of intestinal epithelial tight junctions." J Epithel Biol Pharmacol, 2012.
- Patel RM, Shindler PW. "The role of the gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of dermatological disease." Br J Dermatol, 2019.
