Aderans
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I think things as price and distribution should be discussed prior to and after the release of the treatment to market. So at this current point it is futile.
Who knows how well Aderans works, they did have bad results at Phase I trials but they did what Replicel should do, they went back to the drawing board did more research and more extensive Phase II trials which started in 2006 if I remember correctly.
I am hoping they will do well but alas we have no proof of that. We will just have to wait. But Phase II shoud end this year and thats great!Comment
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I'm sorry to have been what someone will call "negative" regarding Aderans, but I have actually started to see the positive in their research. They have actually proved to be growing cosmetical desireble hairs. These hairs have also apperead in the amazingly amount of 13 hairs pr cm^2 (per square centimeter), which is only experienced by the luckiest Finasteride patients. In 2010, 60-70% of the trial candidats experienced these latter results. In addition, this was only in the beginning period of the trials.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oQYjppOPJMComment
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I'm sorry to have been what someone will call "negative" regarding Aderans, but I have actually started to see the positive in their research. They have actually proved to be growing cosmetical desireble hairs. These hairs have also apperead in the amazingly amount of 13 hairs pr cm^2 (per square centimeter), which is only experienced by the luckiest Finasteride patients. In 2010, 60-70% of the trial candidats experienced these latter results. In addition, this was only in the beginning period of the trials.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oQYjppOPJM
As you can see in the video, Aderans has photographic results on hair cloning. Which are cosmetically significant.
It is just a matter of time now.
If it gets released in 2014, I would be 28-29.Comment
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What sort of government approval does a hair cloning technology require before being offered to consumers in the U.S.? It isn't a drug, it isn't something you ingest or inject, and it isn't even a topical, so I'm not sure what regulatory agency and scheme it falls under.Comment
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What sort of government approval does a hair cloning technology require before being offered to consumers in the U.S.? It isn't a drug, it isn't something you ingest or inject, and it isn't even a topical, so I'm not sure what regulatory agency and scheme it falls under.Comment
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What sort of government approval does a hair cloning technology require before being offered to consumers in the U.S.? It isn't a drug, it isn't something you ingest or inject, and it isn't even a topical, so I'm not sure what regulatory agency and scheme it falls under.
Are you talking about something separate, or am I wrong about Aderans?Comment
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No, you're right. I was speculating about the type of hair multiplication treatment that might involve cloning follicles and then implanting them in the scalp in a manner similar to conventional HTs.Comment
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