Hair Laser Comb's
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Fair enough. I still don't feel 21 hairs per square centimeter is a lot. But anyways, think of their claim this way. Those terminal hairs didn't sprout out of the scalp as terminal hairs. LLLT does not do that. Those terminal hairs were vellus hairs before treatment. What doctors who have studied LLLT themselves have found is that LLLT increases the caliber of individual hairs, it increases the strength of individual hairs, it improves the quality of individual hairs and it makes hair grow faster (women love this part BTW). However, if you have a square centimeter of scalp that has less than 21 vellus hairs in it, you will not get 21 terminal hairs out of that area of scalp, no matter what treatment you use. Remember, nothing works on areas that are slick bald - except hair transplant surgery.Comment
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Simple. Money. Doctors who give Laser treatments obviously make money from it. Doctors who don't offer it have no vested interest in promoting false science, therefore they will speak the truth. There is no scientific evidence as of yet that LLLT can help hair growth. Lexington only submitted one study that was published in a peer reviewed journal. Peer review is the only meaningful way to assess accuracy and truth. All other Lexington studies are meaningless.Comment
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Simple. Money. Doctors who give Laser treatments obviously make money from it. Doctors who don't offer it have no vested interest in promoting false science, therefore they will speak the truth. There is no scientific evidence as of yet that LLLT can help hair growth. Lexington only submitted one study that was published in a peer reviewed journal. Peer review is the only meaningful way to assess accuracy and truth. All other Lexington studies are meaningless.
So the doctor that sells LLLT basically would be a horrible hair transplant surgeon because they are giving false hope to the patient that the LLLT would work, right?Comment
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The patient needs to be aware of the limitations of surgery and the reality that his hair loss will likely progress without attempting to treat it. In short, if the patient has realistic expectations given his own circumstances, it isn't foolish at all.Comment
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