Quick Comparison
| Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu) | Vitamin K | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Concentrations: 0.1-1% in skincare products. Apply once or twice daily. Do NOT use with strong acids (vitamin C at low pH, AHAs) — copper can catalyze free radical formation with ascorbic acid. Best used as a standalone PM treatment or mixed with peptide serums. | Concentrations: 1-5% in eye creams and targeted treatments. Apply to under-eye area and areas with visible blood vessels. Results take 4-8 weeks of consistent use. Phytonadione (vitamin K1) is the most common topical form. |
| Application | Topical (serum, cream). Blue/copper-colored products. Do not combine with low-pH vitamin C. | Topical (eye cream, serum). Apply gently to under-eye area and areas of concern. |
| Research Papers | 10 papers | 10 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu)
GHK-Cu activates wound repair genes through copper-dependent transcription factor modulation. It stimulates fibroblasts to produce collagen types I, III, and V via COL1A1, COL3A1, COL5A1 upregulation, plus elastin, decorin, and glycosaminoglycans. Copper serves as cofactor for lysyl oxidase (collagen cross-linking). It attracts macrophages and mast cells releasing PDGF, TGF-beta, FGF. Promotes angiogenesis via VEGF. Uniquely activates MMP-2 and MMP-9 to break down damaged collagen and scar tissue — supporting healthy remodeling. Balanced anabolic-catabolic activity explains efficacy in anti-aging and scar revision. Avoid with vitamin C: copper catalyzes Fenton reactions oxidizing ascorbic acid.
Vitamin K
Vitamin K (phytonadione/K1) is cofactor for gamma-glutamyl carboxylase, which carboxylates glutamic acid residues in clotting factors II, VII, IX, X and proteins S, C — essential for calcium binding and coagulation cascade activation. Topically promotes reabsorption of subcutaneous extravasated blood by activating local clotting cascades that convert leaked hemoglobin to biliverdin and bilirubin for clearance. Strengthens capillary walls, reduces vascular permeability. For vascular dark circles: improves vessel wall integrity, reduces hemosiderin deposition. Supports elastic fiber production through matrix Gla protein carboxylation. Has anti-inflammatory effects. Clinical use: bruising, post-procedure ecchymosis, periorbital vascular hyperpigmentation. Results require 4-8 weeks consistent application.
Risks & Safety
Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu)
Common
Blue/green tint to product (normal — copper color). Mild irritation.
Serious
Can be pro-oxidant when combined with vitamin C — avoid concurrent use.
Rare
Allergic reaction to copper.
Vitamin K
Common
Essentially none — very well-tolerated.
Serious
None documented topically.
Rare
Allergic contact dermatitis.
Full Profiles
Copper Peptides (GHK-Cu) →
GHK-Cu is a naturally occurring copper complex that declines with age (60% reduction by age 60). It is one of the most potent wound-healing and skin-remodeling signals known — it stimulates collagen, elastin, glycosaminoglycan synthesis, and new blood vessel growth while simultaneously breaking down excess scar tissue. Used in both anti-aging and post-procedure recovery.
Vitamin K →
A fat-soluble vitamin that supports blood clotting and blood vessel integrity. In skincare, vitamin K is primarily used for dark circles under the eyes (caused by visible blood vessels), bruising, spider veins, and post-procedure redness. It strengthens capillary walls and supports the reabsorption of blood that has leaked from damaged vessels. Often combined with retinol and vitamin C in eye creams.