Histogen Update - Spencer Kobren Speaks With Dr. Craig L. Ziering
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Yes there are a lot of us that would pay a years wage or remortgage the house to get their hair back, but remember it's one thing saying you will pay silly money and another thing actually getting it and going through with it. I mean what are you going to do rob a bank, rob your granny ? Yes you can get a loan, maybe, but if Histogen do end up having something that works they have to be very careful with their pricing or they will lose a lot of custom, and i think ethically they can make the price reasonable and accessible to all, and still have an unbelievable amount of wealth.Comment
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Yes there are a lot of us that would pay a years wage or remortgage the house to get their hair back, but remember it's one thing saying you will pay silly money and another thing actually getting it and going through with it. I mean what are you going to do rob a bank, rob your granny ? Yes you can get a loan, maybe, but if Histogen do end up having something that works they have to be very careful with their pricing or they will lose a lot of custom, and i think ethically they can make the price reasonable and accessible to all, and still have an unbelievable amount of wealth.Comment
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Without a doubt I would pay 30K for it. Not even a question. A lot of people say that they won't get a hair transplant because of the cost. I won't get one cus I don't want a smiley-face scar on the back of my head for the rest of my life. So cost was never an issue for me. But if a non-scarring treatment like Histogen's HSC complex worked, I would travel to the ends of the earth and pay whatever it costs to have a full head of hair again.Comment
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Without a doubt I would pay 30K for it. Not even a question. A lot of people say that they won't get a hair transplant because of the cost. I won't get one cus I don't want a smiley-face scar on the back of my head for the rest of my life. So cost was never an issue for me. But if a non-scarring treatment like Histogen's HSC complex worked, I would travel to the ends of the earth and pay whatever it costs to have a full head of hair again.
What pisses me off is how someone like Dr Lee had his solutions taken down and idiots like bioregenerative sciences can carry on looting desperate customers.
Regardless, Minox is a joke when your genes decide its truly game over for your hair - so too is propecia - we need a solution that allows us to swim to shore instead of treading water.Comment
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Posted by whynot on Hairsite:
http://www.stem-cell-regeneration.co...airgrowth.html
It looks like some shitty version of PRP.
"We take fat and then inject fat into scalp for monies".Comment
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Hey UK, I could give you some more detail on this since I actually called up the place that offers this. This place is supposedly affiliated with the Peace Wellness Center in Arizona (www.stem-cell-center.com) which uses stem cells to treat a whole range of diseases. What they told me was that at their center in AZ, they extract stem cells from your fat tissue and put them into the bald/balding areas of your scalp in order to stimulate hair growth. This place is supposed to be their affiliate in the Philippines which supposedly uses WNT and Noggin (2 proteins responsible for the formation of a pit in the skin, telling stem cells to become hair as opposed to skin), which cannot be legally used in the U.S. since they're not cleared by the FDA. I don't think adipose stem cells will do much to stimulate new hair growth. It is an excellent idea to use WNT and Noggin to stimulate hair growth except I'm not sure if this is legit. I really wonder how come some other countries do not attempt to use WNT and/or Noggin for hair regrowth since they're not bound by the restrictions of the FDA. I know that Histogen is attempting to do that (and God bless them for that, really) but maybe even other countries could bypass extensive clinical trials and offer a WNT/Noggin treatment right now. Anyway, I think they're offering something different to PRP. PRP uses stem cells and growth factors generated from human blood, while this treatment is using stem cells from adipose (fat) tissue. I personally don't think that it will work that great, but I really am interested in using WNT and Noggin to regrow hair. If I was sure that it was legit, I'd sign up in a second, but as usual, I'm not sure that it is.Comment
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Intercytex hair division was sold to some other compnay, but I don't recall which.
About the price, it's pure marketing. Just look at all products and services out there. First is very expensive then it gets cheaper. But I think the difference along time will not be much because there are competing services.
Some things to keep in mind:
- It's not a cure!!! It's a treatment that helps you get some hair back.
- It competes with surgical treatments, especially FUE. And we still don't know how they fare against each other.
- The process seems to be a lot less laborious than FUE. That means less man-hours of work involved in hair extraction and carefully positioning.
- Oh another thing I almost forgot, there those other companies also working on other treatments (like cell replication), so that means competition.
I suspect the price will be in the FUE range.
Like everyone else I'm looking forward for this, but let's keep our feet on the ground. This is 2-4 years away. How's your hair doing? Can it wait more?
Personally I'm thinking on doing FUE now (but have to do some research first) and in 3 or 4 years complement it with Histogen.
I'm so tired and depressed... I want to get a few of my youth years back.
This is even more depressing in these mass media days (tv and internet), where we're bombarded with notions of attractiveness that all of us must comply with. And if you don't have hair, you're old.
@ DepressedByHairLoss
1) regarding the scar involved with transplants: What is the problem with FUE?
2) about the WNT/Noggin treatment. AFAIK Histogen uses WNT proteins.Comment
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Just hope Aderans can come up with something good.
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Hey do you think aderans can give you the same density that histogens are saying they can the 57 hairs per cm2. I know aderans says 79% more terminal hairs. I Wonder how much hairs they can give you in one cm2.Comment
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@ UK - I really should've asked them how they obtained the WNT's. They told me that the price of the WNT/Noggin treatment was almost 20 grand. That kind of discouraged me, especially since they were unsure of any proven results. But as I said before, if the treatment was proven, it would be more than well worth it for me to spend 20 grand to restore my hair. Also, several medical labs sell WNT proteins. For example: www.stemrd.com
@ lost.hair.lost.youth - There are many problems with FUE. First, a few doctors even admitted to me that FUE does in fact cause scarring, when the hairs are yanked out from their original positions. It may not scar to the extent that FUT does, but scarring is still scarring and I don't want to spend the rest of my life working to cover up a scarred head. Also, I believe FUE only works to cover very small areas of hair loss. I know that Histogen is using WNT's and God bless them for it. I just want something in the interim until HSC is released. I don't want to waste at least 3 more years struggling with thinning hair/baldness.Comment
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I wouldn't touch any of those 'products'.
Although Sonic Hedgehog (shh) mutants have shown that there is a requirement for Shh in normal follicular growth, recent studies have suggested that unregulated induction of epithelial Shh target genes promotes the formation of hair follicle tumors through its proliferative influences on hPr-like cells (Figure 3). If Shh target-gene induction is sufficient for the proliferation of hPr-like cells, then expression of Shh target genes should generate ectopic epithelium with follicular differentiation. Consistent with this notion, forced activation of Shh target genes in epithelium induces follicular tumors, the most clinically significant of which are BCCs (skin cancer). These carcinomas are composed of cells that are ultrastructurally and immunophenotypically similar to hPr cells and, thus, are the least differentiated of tumors derived from hair follicles [1,22,23]. Since the first studies that associated mutations in ptc1 with Gorlin Syndrome, an inherited susceptibility to BCC formation, analyses of sporadic BCCs have verified a link between activation of the Shh pathway, target-gene induction and BCC formation [24–26].Comment
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