Printed skin with follicles
Collapse
X
-
The big question:
Do the follicles grow terminal hair? If not, I don't care.
This team is from Toronto! Close to home. I've already called the doctor but his clinic/office is closed. I've left voicemail. I'll try and get some more answers from him tomorrow. -
Comment
-
Let us know HELL.Comment
-
Its nifty for people with burns, but I dont think it has much to do with MPB. The hair is just normal vellus body hair probably that is normally part of skin. Growing skin though is a feat its not a simple thing to do, but not much use for MPB although advances like this indirectly and slowly take us toward growing real hairComment
-
I don't spend too much time here in the cutting edge section, but this guy gets shit done! Great value to the hair loss community.Comment
-
Definitely a key member, there's about 10 of you whose posts I really pay attention to and value. This is one of the few online forums I know of that are really trying to make things happen and solve problems.Comment
-
For example, I don't know what process they're using to create the skin, but it seems like they would start with some of the patient's tissue so why can't they start out with tissue from our scalp donor area and create more skin with larger follicles like in the donor area? Then they could remove balding tissue, and replace the balding tissue with the large pieces of cloned skin that have scalp donor area sized follicles.
It sounds like an unlimited donor supply to me.Comment
-
As nice as it is that healthcare in Canada is free, it's still a JOKE in many respects. I left voicemail last night for Dr. Marc Jeschke. Here's his profile page:
I also called this morning, and again it went STRAIGHT to voicemail.Comment
-
Whatever process they're using to grow skin with hair why couldn't they use that same process to produce skin that contains bigger follicles?
For example, I don't know what process they're using to create the skin, but it seems like they would start with some of the patient's tissue so why can't they start out with tissue from our scalp donor area and create more skin with larger follicles like in the donor area? Then they could remove balding tissue, and replace the balding tissue with the large pieces of cloned skin that have scalp donor area sized follicles.
It sounds like an unlimited donor supply to me.Comment
-
let me tell you doctors are very busy and lazy. Most doctors I know work like 3 or 4 days a week with every friday off. Sounds good to me plus they get paid like many times more than the average person when they are there. So its not that surprising you cant reach them
Maybe not lazy but like congress they get way more than a fair amount of time offComment
-
let me tell you doctors are very busy and lazy. Most doctors I know work like 3 or 4 days a week with every friday off. Sounds good to me plus they get paid like many times more than the average person when they are there. So its not that surprising you cant reach them
Maybe not lazy but like congress they get way more than a fair amount of time offComment
-
Third-degree burns typically require very complex treatment, and leave nasty scars once they've healed. Researchers at Johns Hopkins University, however, are reporting success at treating such burns on lab mice, using a new type of hydrogel that grows new skin (as opposed to scar tissue) over burn…
I don't mean to bump up a thread that is almost 3 months old yet since I've been gone from the forums for like 6 months, I am reviewing many of these threads for the first time.
Both of the above links describe how skin was able to be grown. The first, albeit on mice, deals with the growth of fully functioning skin with hair follicles, and using a natural concoction that shouldn't require rigorous FDA trials. The second deals with the growth of fully functioning skin on an actual human being. Yet despite this innovative and apparently effective method, burn victims still need to endure the painful and scarring procedures of skin grafts and debridements. The status quo of traditional treatments remains, despite so many innovations that could make medicine much more effective.Comment
Comment