View Full Version : Spencer Kobren Speaks With UCLA Scientist About Latest Hair Raising Discovery
tbtadmin
02-18-2011, 04:46 PM
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KeepHoping
02-18-2011, 05:31 PM
Can we get our hands on this at all?
CVAZBAR
02-18-2011, 05:46 PM
Spencer once again comes through with the interview. Thanks
Westonci
02-18-2011, 05:51 PM
Kudos to Spencer for the interview
gmonasco
02-18-2011, 06:19 PM
Can we get our hands on this at all?
Why? Do you have some stressed, hairless mice?
KeepHoping
02-18-2011, 07:23 PM
No but I have some stressed thinning scalp that I'd like to try it on.
gmonasco
02-18-2011, 07:55 PM
You're going to inject yourself with an untested peptide? If the result is that you end up with a fur-covered abdomen, will you consider it a success?
KeepHoping
02-19-2011, 09:12 AM
I highly doubt that injecting my scalp with an untested peptide will result in a fur-covered abdomen but if nobody tries it, nobody will ever know including yourself.
gmonasco
02-19-2011, 10:08 AM
I highly doubt that injecting my scalp with an untested peptide will result in a fur-covered abdomen
Is your scalp the only portion of your body that grows hair? What makes you think that the effects of injecting a substance into your body will necessarily be limited to the immediate area of the injection site?
but if nobody tries it, nobody will ever know including yourself.
If people try it stupidly, we'll still never know.
amadeus
02-19-2011, 02:04 PM
Spencer once again comes through with the interview. Thanks
Spencer Kobren is THE MAN!!! You don’t this get type of in-depth interview on the news, that’s for sure.
KeepHoping
02-19-2011, 05:57 PM
Eventually if they want to conduct human trials they will have to start with a test spot with a very low does otherwise nothing will come of it at all. You may not believe in it and that's fine but if anything is going to develop out of this researchers will have to try it plus you have no idea if it will have an effect on humans and neither does anyone else to be fair as far as I know. Plus I didn't post, "hey, can gmonasco can be a guinea pig for everyone else and inject it into his head?" No need for the harsh tone. I can pretty much guarantee you if this substance was or is obtainable people would try it so you won't have to worry about growing hair on your abdomen.
gmonasco
02-19-2011, 08:09 PM
Eventually if they want to conduct human trials they will have to start with a test spot with a very low does otherwise nothing will come of it at all.
But what they may eventually test out on humans won't necessarily be the exact same thing they as what they injected into mice, and it won't necessarily be injected into the scalp (if, indeed, the end product is an injectable at all).
if anything is going to develop out of this researchers will have to try it
That's why this is an area best left to researchers, not self-experimentation by people who have no idea what they're doing.
plus you have no idea if it will have an effect on humans and neither does anyone else to be fair as far as I know.
Which is one hell of a good reason why nobody should be injecting himself with it.
Plus I didn't post, "hey, can gmonasco can be a guinea pig for everyone else and inject it into his head?" No need for the harsh tone.
Yeah, because desperate, uninformed people harming themselves by self-injecting untested substances is just the kind of publicity likely to bring serious research effort and funding to the issue of hair loss.
fontanajul
02-23-2011, 09:58 AM
I have a question, could this be a possible cure to Telogen Effluvium?
Winston
02-23-2011, 10:09 AM
I have a question, could this be a possible cure to Telogen Effluvium?
From the interview and everything that I have been reading it sounds like it might be a huge step toward finding a cure for Alopecia Areata, which is devastating for many people. It might also help TE too since stress is involved. I’m keeping my fingers crossed, MPB sucks but Alopecia Areata is heartbreaking and it happens to so many women and children.
gmonasco
02-23-2011, 10:16 AM
MPB sucks but Alopecia Areata is heartbreaking and it happens to so many women and children.
I don't mean to sound like I'm advocating selfishly taking advantage of someone else's misfortune, but getting women and children with alopecia areata in the public eye more prominently might be a good way of publicizing (and getting funding for research into) hair loss in general, which of course includes MPB. Most people associate hair loss only with adult (primarily middle-aged) males, and those examples don't really generate much sympathy.
RichardDawkins
02-23-2011, 10:18 AM
I agree with Winston here. Iam glad that i only got normal MPB and not AA because this would be the pure horror.
I hope that people with AAcan be helped because in the normal Alopecia case like we have it, its more or likely the soft version of alopecia.
renordw
03-05-2011, 10:02 AM
Gimme!!!!!!!!
BoSox
03-06-2011, 06:00 AM
I wish I was a mouse.
gmonasco
03-06-2011, 09:45 AM
This was huge news over at baldtruthtalkformice.com
RichardDawkins
03-06-2011, 09:54 AM
Yeah but its good to see progress even if those are mice. Who knows maybe there is a security protocol which speed things up