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Photoactivation?
Journal of Investigative Dermatology (2 July 2015) | doi:10.1038/jid.2015.248
"Photoactivation of ROS Production In Situ Transiently Activates Cell Proliferation in Mouse Skin and in the Hair Follicle Stem Cell Niche Promoting Hair Growth and Wound Healing"
http://www.nature.com/jid/journal/va...d2015248a.html
photoactivation:the activation or control of a chemical, chemical reaction, or organism by light, as the activation of chlorophyll by sunlight during photosynthesis.
They are already using photoactivation in some cancer treatments (to activate medications, target tumors,etc),
I think progress in this domain could help us to have a solution, like a LLT treatment power x1000 I guess lol
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Another good and interesting find! I really like the progress in terms of wound healing because it not only negates the problems of growth factors in terms of the continued AR activation whilst being applied but can also aid in the effects of fibrosis.
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Another mouse study. Report back with findings on humans.
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Originally Posted by hellouser
Another mouse study. Report back with findings on humans.
Man why do you want your mouse to bald ? Mice want hair too just in case they bald
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Originally Posted by hellouser
Another mouse study. Report back with findings on humans.
Hellrouser sits around saying nobody cares about male baldness
Mice sit around saying nobody cares about mice baldness
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But that's why I actually believe SM and wounding has something. Where as a rat doesn't suffer from mpb the processes in terms of follicle and skin regeneration after injury is a closeish model.
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Originally Posted by NeedHairASAP
Hellrouser sits around saying nobody cares about male baldness
Mice sit around saying nobody cares about mice baldness
U made me laugh bro , that was so funny .Hope Pilox works for us.
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I believe LLLT has some credibility to it (probably far from being a 'total cure' by itself). I think it works similar microneedling by creating miniature wounds which we know is crucial for follicle neogenesis. However, the wounding has to be 'enhanced' with the right compounds so that the healing process can create terminal hairs.
There was that documented case where an elderly man accidentally burned his scalp and it healed to grow a full head of hair. Similarly, it is known that burnt/sun burnt areas of the body are known to grow hair. (I, personally, can attest to this. Got terribly sunburt when I was 15 on my shoulders to the point where it blistered. Now, I have very thick dark hairs all over those parts of my shoulders which grow back really fast.)
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