Any update news of Aderans?
Aderans
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Anyone wanna pitch in and all of us get a plane and go over for the procedure?.
I'll say it again because I have been watching them for years....I believe Aderans will honestly start Phase 3 in February as stated. Phase 3 is huge for anyone dealing with hair loss.....it may not be the "best" of the solutions out there, but it is a solution. Where hair transplants are limited to a certain number of hairs, Aderans clones the follicles from a dime-sized excision from the back of the scalp, and multiplies these into several more hairs. Ultimately creating an "endless" supply of hairs to transplant.
That's the very watered down explanation for newbies or what have you....like I said, it's not as cool as Histogen is, but it IS a solution. And it's ahead of the pack when it comes to timetables. So we'll see. If Phase 3 is delayed beyond February, I'm going for a transplant. Didn't want to, but my loss is getting very noticeable :/ not cool to be 23 lol.Comment
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the slides from OP's link says 2010, here is a video from a hair loss convention in MTL in 2011 and the same guy was giving a speech. In the vid he addresses the direction of the hair problem and apparently found a way to fix it... i havent gone through the whole vid in OP's link yet so relax if its the same info.
edit: i see that this vid was already postedComment
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No they have only proved unlimited wig supply.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7Sw...eature=relatedComment
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No they have only proved unlimited wig supply.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7Sw...eature=related
That would be the kind of thing that would cause wet dreams to bald guys bro.Comment
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"Cellular hair regeneration offers a remarkable solution to the problem. By encouraging follicular cells to reproduce themselves via a method ARI calls the Ji Gami™ process, practically an unlimited number of hair-generating cellular units can be produced. During this process, often called hair multiplication or hair cloning, a small piece of tissue is removed from the neckline. Cells are cultivated in controlled conditions where they are encouraged to multiply by the addition of proprietary growth media. When enough new cells are formed, they are returned to the scalp, where they are injected and elicit new hair growth and thickness, ultimately producing more hair than the client had before."
This is directly from the cellular multiplication page from Aderans, which skeptics may say is just rhetoric. At this point, they could be right. However, going into phase 3 in February would personally lead me to believe they actually have the product/procedure ready to market.Comment
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"Cellular hair regeneration offers a remarkable solution to the problem. By encouraging follicular cells to reproduce themselves via a method ARI calls the Ji Gami™ process, practically an unlimited number of hair-generating cellular units can be produced. During this process, often called hair multiplication or hair cloning, a small piece of tissue is removed from the neckline. Cells are cultivated in controlled conditions where they are encouraged to multiply by the addition of proprietary growth media. When enough new cells are formed, they are returned to the scalp, where they are injected and elicit new hair growth and thickness, ultimately producing more hair than the client had before."
This is directly from the cellular multiplication page from Aderans, which skeptics may say is just rhetoric. At this point, they could be right. However, going into phase 3 in February would personally lead me to believe they actually have the product/procedure ready to market.Comment
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"Cellular hair regeneration offers a remarkable solution to the problem. By encouraging follicular cells to reproduce themselves via a method ARI calls the Ji Gami™ process, practically an unlimited number of hair-generating cellular units can be produced. During this process, often called hair multiplication or hair cloning, a small piece of tissue is removed from the neckline. Cells are cultivated in controlled conditions where they are encouraged to multiply by the addition of proprietary growth media. When enough new cells are formed, they are returned to the scalp, where they are injected and elicit new hair growth and thickness, ultimately producing more hair than the client had before."
This is directly from the cellular multiplication page from Aderans, which skeptics may say is just rhetoric. At this point, they could be right. However, going into phase 3 in February would personally lead me to believe they actually have the product/procedure ready to market.Comment
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