I found this:
Lol, the results are pathetic.
It's minox on steroids if anything.
Nothing to see here.
Induchem
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"up to 28200 hairs" and "better than hair transplant" are rather bold claims
There's no way this is legit. If such thing really existed, it wouldn't be revealed only month before release. Besides, there's no pics, no studies, no anything.
Also keep in mind that 1 hair also falls into "up to 28200 hairs" category
And they put a comma in 28,200 so perhaps they meant 28,2
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Sounds like a cosmetics product (not a medication) with pseudoscientific marketing. So basically, another Neogenic.Leave a comment:
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How did this skip under the radar you never know this could be a dream come trueLeave a comment:
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It is not that the claim is so bold. It is that by looking up the main keyword, Neocapyl, you end up with another one, Neocapil, which is just Minoxidil.
They talk about a new active ingredient, but then why did they choose a word so similar to an existing one, which is known to correspond to a Minoxidil-based product? Very fishy.Leave a comment:
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It's good to see even the eternal optimists are extremely skeptical of this product. It should be obvious to anyone on here that this is a blatant scam. Their science is so laughable that I'm shocked most people don't see through it.
Firstly, there is absolutely no evidence this "new molecule" ihydroquercetin can completely suppress and reverse the effects of DHT. In fact, there is nothing in the published literature on such a molecule. It could be a typo and they could possibly be talking about dihydroquercetin, which makes matters even worse as it has absolutely no role in the development or stimulation of hair follicles.
This article almost seems like it was written by the Onion, and I'm thinking this site is in on this scam as it's the only site that seems to be pushing this snake-oil as a "breakthrough". If this was really was true, they'd be publishing their results in high profile journals and having citations through the roof, making a name for themselves in the medical and scientific world. The fact they have done neither that nor have any other form of tangible evidence should be enough for everyone on here to conclude that this is just the same old snake-oil but packaged slightly differently.Leave a comment:
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no one get even the slightest hope up for this. there are no photographs, that's a catastrophic sign for a product scheduled to launch in basically one month. there is simply no way this is legit, sorry guys.Leave a comment:
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international journal of cosmetic science had no impact factor on 2010 which make them more wortless than italian bonds :PHmmm ... actually they do somewhat seem legit. They have researchers at universities and publications like these: http://www.induchem.com/wp-content/f...ucent_HR14.pdf
So ... Let's see what happens.Leave a comment:
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More than likely bogus, but they said it's set to launch in April so at least we won't have to wait very long to find out.Leave a comment:
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It seems that there is some foundation even. Just have not found how this product will hit the market. Which form to use. If a clinical need for such a procedure or give to make yourself at home.Leave a comment:
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Hehe yeah, up to 28.000 hairs but at the same time they say that 15% of the people see no result at all... I think a lot of the people will fall in that '15%' category
Just my 2 cents
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They claim it produced "up to" 28,000 new hairs. Sounds like weasel words. That kind of growth would produce very noticeable cosmetic results. I can't help but be reminded of stuff like Capixyl and Loreal's Densifique. The product launch is scheduled for April 1...Leave a comment:
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Meh
Nigam laughs in the face of 28,000 new hairs. With him its 60,000 MINIMUM, and all grown within ten daysLeave a comment:
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