Is it true that hair follicles never die?
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I've read something like that before. Something about they just shrink to the point that they can not be seen by the naked eye? I believe that is true, because how else do people who get on the "big 3" can grow hair on visibly slick bald scalp? They have to be there, just microscopic sized. -
I've read something like that before. Something about they just shrink to the point that they can not be seen by the naked eye? I believe that is true, because how else do people who get on the "big 3" can grow hair on visibly slick bald scalp? They have to be there, just microscopic sized.Comment
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Wow, that's a very interesting article and it confirms what I've always suspected. This really gives me a ton of hope that baldness can really be reversed. That's a great website too.Comment
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This really caught my attention more than anything:
this guy re-grew a full head of hair after 45 years of complete horseshoe fringe slick baldness.Comment
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Thanks for this website by the way, there's another interesting article in there about Taurine, mega green tea extract, zinc, and grape seed extract being good for hair loss. It won't hurt to try. I think i'm going to take the plunge but with very low expectations. I'll also add silica, biotin and MSM. I think i'm already taking the best possible treatment from what is available to me, Dutasteride and Rogaine, so I mean it wouldn't hurt to add in natural treatments as well. Hopefully at worst, the addition of natural supplements at least improve overall health. If it does nothing for MPB, at least I can say I did try out natural treatments. I have tried it in the past but none of the aforementioned one's.Comment
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They never die the stem cells that produce hair are always there I think. We dont have any treatments that actually regrow hair after many years so we dont know if its possible to get them to start growing hair again or if its time dependent.
Basically its unknown but its possible. I would be happy with just a way to keep the hair I have without obviously taking a drug forever.Comment
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I recall reading something that they go through a process at certain point where it's much harder for them to come back. This was a very recent article(and was much more scientific in language than I just stated). Essentially after a certain point stuff like Fin won't help you as much, but that point is usually 2-3 years after the start?(cant recall what it said)
But still, the stem cell is still there and I'm sure it is possible with future medicine to rejuvenate it, it's just a matter of getting the research done to find that. I'd say we're getting closer and closer.Comment
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I know, I totally agree with you on that point as well. I've expounded on that point in some of my past posts as well. I truly believe that most of the hair transplant industry desperately wants to maintain the status quo and still have hair transplants be the so-called "gold standard", quite simply because these transplants make them obscene amounts of money.Comment
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I know, I totally agree with you on that point as well. I've expounded on that point in some of my past posts as well. I truly believe that most of the hair transplant industry desperately wants to maintain the status quo and still have hair transplants be the so-called "gold standard", quite simply because these transplants make them obscene amounts of money.Comment
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