Am I a Norwood 2 or 3? (or 2A or 3A?)
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21557276
.. Immunohistochemical study revealed significant upregulation of ARs by finasteride treatment for 30-180 days....
seriously, how else would you explain that even though finasteride brings your DHT to castrate levels, yet you still continue to bald overtime when castrates don't
Well FIN does not block dht 100% .. and as time goes on some other variable comes into play. MPB genetics have a time clock that determine when you start going bald.
For example, why do some older men (60 +) who have mostly full heads of hair start going bald so late in life? They have lower levels of T/DHT compared to when they were younger yet they are only now starting to go bald.
The theory I read was that the time clock part of the genetics does something to make your AR's more sensitive to what remaining DHT you still have. So as long as you have some DHT, you will start going bald .
Probably the same reason as to why % wise, the amount of men balding, keeps increasing with age.Comment
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Ok. So this article does strongly suggest AR count increases with fin use. But that isn't technically hyperandrogenism (which would mean excess secretion of androgens rather than an increasing # of receptor sites) and I'm not convinced it would lead to the same symptoms, or to hair loss, nor am I convinced it is the sole reason why one can lose ground while on fin--if it is a reason. I think jumping to these conclusions isn't doing guys like Kirby any favors. It still requires a lot of guesswork on our part to fill in all these blanks, and guesswork has its place but it doesn't substitute for proper studies.
It still doesn't add up that fin actually does continue working for as long as 17 years (most likely longer, that's just the longest example I know of). Spencer himself admits he uses spray and concealer, but he is still a NW3v. He started balding in his early 20s and is now 47. There's no way he wouldn't be at least a NW5 by now without fin, and that's being highly generous. If he quit the drug tomorrow he'd be a bald man in less than 16 months. And there are users on hair loss forums who report over a decade of keeping their hair on fin or fin/dut.
I'd say this notion of the body compensating/overcompensating for finasteride is worth looking into with more, different and bigger studies, but I'm not ready to embrace it yet--certainly not as a cause of hair loss--any more than I'm ready to embrace the idea of Gho multiplying follicles.
(btw I agree T doesn't cause hair loss, I only brought it up because it's needed for DHT to form and thought that might be another contributing factor to DHT reduction in castrates)Comment
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At least you are conceding your mistake. So what if it goes down compared to baseline, it is still significantly above not using the med at all. Look at that huge gap between the real medicine and the placebo. Discounting that gap the way you are is unethical.Comment
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Either way at least this thread is teaching me new things.
My new regimen:
1.25 mg finasteride: once daily
2% keto shampoo: 1-2 times weekly
Castration: as neededComment
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That study I posted says that FINASTERIDE is more effective than CASTRATION.
If castrates never go bald, why do finasteride users do?
There is something more to this... as I said, you can't just suppress your 5AR long enough without your body doing something about it.Comment
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In our study, finasteride influenced AR expression in benign prostate tissue and prostate cancer cell. Before we can use finasteride in chemoprevention with confidence, we still need to clarify the influence of finasteride in ARs and its regulation pathway.
this is an actual study from Taiwan university.
Castration leaves more androgens than finasteride that's why castration sometimes it's not enough to stop prostate cancer:
finasteride works in a bad way because your body tries to fight its effect and after 5 years or so it starts winning....Comment
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right but my point was that hair count SHOULD NOT GO DOWN EVER.
That study I posted says that FINASTERIDE is more effective than CASTRATION.
If castrates never go bald, why do finasteride users do?
There is something more to this... as I said, you can't just suppress your 5AR long enough without your body doing something about it.
Castration before baldness begins will prevent it from ever occurring, from what I understand. Is there any evidence that castration after baldness has started will prevent further baldness? If so, I would certainly like to read the studies.
The logical reason for why average hair counts decline on finasteride is that the drug is not preventing hair loss entirely, but is simply slowing it down dramatically. As you can see from the chart, and as Tracy mentioned, the average finasteride responder is still considerably above baseline after five years on the medication. The slope is also much less steep for the finasteride user than it is for the placebo user, indicating that the rate of loss also continues to be slower after the 5 yr period. If 1 mg of finasteride blocks less than 90% of the type 2 5alphareductase, then the remaining DHT could still attack the follicles, and this would explain why loss still occurs, albeit slower. Dutasteride blocks more than 97% of type 2 5alphareductase, from what I understand, and while there has never been a 5 yr study done by Glaxo in a manner similar to Merck's finasteride study, my hunch is that the rate of loss is only a fraction of what the finasteride loss rate is, and certainly way lower than placebo.
If I am on here 10 years from now and have maintained all of my hair (that would be for a total of 16 years on dutasteride), then I think you will have to eat your words, because there is baldness on both sides of my family. There are many accounts on forums of people maintaining for 15 years on finasteride, how does this square with your hyperandrogenicity theory? On the other hand, if my loss suddenly picks up in the next 3-4 years and I go bald very fast, then I will put some serious stock in what you are saying.Comment
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THE ONLY EXPLANATION for this phenomenon is that your body makes all of your androgen receptors more sensitive over time so that's why you start losing hair after some years with finasteride...
As you can see from the chart, and as Tracy mentioned, the average finasteride responder is still considerably above baseline after five years on the medication. The slope is also much less steep for the finasteride user than it is for the placebo user, indicating that the rate of loss also continues to be slower after the 5 yr period.
read propeciahelp.com forums. A lot of people there report EXCESSIVELY RAPID scalp hair loss and just as bad body hair growth after going off finasteride. Why would that happen unless your androgen receptors have become more sensitive to due 5AR blockers?
Dutasteride blocks more than 97% of type 2 5alphareductase, from what I understand, and while there has never been a 5 yr study done by Glaxo in a manner similar to Merck's finasteride study, my hunch is that the rate of loss is only a fraction of what the finasteride loss rate is, and certainly way lower than placebo.
also, how do you explain how some people start LOSING hair after getting on finasteride/dutasteride?
I don't care about one particular person's results. His body must be slow at adjusting itself then.
odds are very much against you at maintaining your hair with DUT for 16 years but good luck
There are many accounts on forums of people maintaining for 15 years on finasteride, how does this square with your hyperandrogenicity theory? On the other hand, if my loss suddenly picks up in the next 3-4 years and I go bald very fast, then I will put some serious stock in what you are saying.Comment
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Have to admit, when I started taking fin, I knew it isn't a drug that is effective forever, and I only ever considered it something to 'tide me over' until the big guns are available. (I'm becoming rapidly pessimistic that anything will be, on the mainstream/legit market, but that's another story.)Comment
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Originally posted by 2020
Originally posted by 2020that's not logical at all... finasteride lowers your DHT levels below castration and castrates never lose their hair.
THE ONLY EXPLANATION for this phenomenon is that your body makes all of your androgen receptors more sensitive over time so that's why you start losing hair after some years with finasteride...
Originally posted by 2020I don't care about the position you're at after 5 years... I see a trend and it is obvious after reading these forums that finasteride DOES in fact stop "working" after 5 years or so....
read propeciahelp.com forums. A lot of people there report EXCESSIVELY RAPID scalp hair loss and just as bad body hair growth after going off finasteride. Why would that happen unless your androgen receptors have become more sensitive to due 5AR blockers?
Originally posted by 2020
Originally posted by 2020sure, because it blocks that much more DHT it takes your body a long time to adjust itself to its "newly normal" androgen receptor sensitivity....
also, how do you explain how some people start LOSING hair after getting on finasteride/dutasteride?
Originally posted by 2020didn't I already prove that androgen sensitivity does in fact go up after taking 5AR blockers?
http://www.ehrs.org/conferenceabstra...s04-sawaya.htm
"A: When the effects of androgens in the body are lessened, e.g. through lowering DHT or by systemic hormone receptor blockade, the body seeks equilibrium through a process called upregulation. This can take the form of increased hormone production and/or increased tissue sensitivity to the remaining hormones. The reason side effects usually gradually disappear with finasteride is probably due to such upregulation. In a small percentage of individuals, it may be that this process overshoots the mark, resulting in significant hyperandrogenicity. This is marked by such signs as greatly increased facial oil, increased pimples, and greatly elevated libido.It's possible that in certain cases such hyperandrogenicity overcomes the hair-protective effect of, say, finasteride, though this does not appear to be the case for the vast majority of people."
Originally posted by 2020I don't care about one particular person's results. His body must be slow at adjusting itself then.
odds are very much against you at maintaining your hair with DUT for 16 years but good luck
Originally posted by 2020many? I don't think there are that many at all. 5-7 years is about the average before you start losing hair againComment
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I am in the unique position of having a very dear friend who just happens to be a M2F trans woman. I have met several of her friends and can attest to what I have seen of their hair. Even those who were suffering hair loss before they had their sex change surgeries stopped losing hair. So yeah, castration prevents it and arrest it - but it doesn't reverse it.Comment
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