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And are you growing hair so far ?
thanks
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hi brady i think its too soon to say i will keep you informed as i am still sceptical.
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Why was this junk put under "Cutting Edge/Future Treatments"?
This junk is a scam. Nothing more. It is an over priced bottle of empty promises.
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I agree... I would not buy it... Sorry...
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thanx
are there stuff that realy help
new here
and i am from belgium so my writing can have a lot of mistakes
so ...
Brady
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Originally Posted by Brady
are there stuff that realy help
new here
The only products that work to treat hair loss are:
Rogaine - or generic Minoxidil.
Propecia - or generic Finasteride (for men)
Anti-androgens (for women)
Low level laser therapy
These treatments above do not work for everyone. Some people will get results from one or more of these treatments, while others will not get any results from any of these treatments.
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Originally Posted by Tracy C
The only products that work to treat hair loss are:
Rogaine - or generic Minoxidil.
Propecia - or generic Finasteride (for men)
Anti-androgens (for women)
Low level laser therapy
These treatments above do not work for everyone. Some people will get results from one or more of these treatments, while others will not get any results from any of these treatments.
Minoxidil and finasteride are the only F.D.A.-approved drug-treatments for androgenic alopecia; that's not to say they're the only ones that work. For instance, dutasteride is effective, but its prescription against hairloss remains (2011) only off-label.
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Originally Posted by HairTalk
Minoxidil and finasteride are the only F.D.A.-approved drug-treatments for androgenic alopecia; that's not to say they're the only ones that work. For instance, dutasteride is effective, but its prescription against hairloss remains (2011) only off-label.
Isnt Dustaride the same kind of thing as propecia but stronger? I've read that if you have sexual side effects from Propecia you're going to be screwed using Dustaride.
Im thinking that the Latisse eyebrow stuff will be awesome if it work for head hair. From what I've read that also works but that isnt approved yet.
Replicel is great if you have a balding pet mouse. If you are interested in cutting edge treatments the first to market will be Aderans and Histogen.
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Originally Posted by Kiwi
Isnt Dustaride the same kind of thing as propecia but stronger? I've read that if you have sexual side effects from Propecia you're going to be screwed using Dustaride.
Im thinking that the Latisse eyebrow stuff will be awesome if it work for head hair. From what I've read that also works but that isnt approved yet.
Replicel is great if you have a balding pet mouse. If you are interested in cutting edge treatments the first to market will be Aderans and Histogen.
Both finasteride and dutasteride inhibit the same enzyme, but the latter does not have F.D.A.-approval to treat hairloss. That's my point — not everything that works is necesarily approved by the F.D.A. to be used.
At this point, I don't think anyone has basis on which to be very excited about any in-the-works treatment; this includes Aderans, Histogen's H.S.C., and RepliCel. There's a possibility any of these will be beneficial, but, at least until near the end of the first quarter of 2012, anything a person expresses is founded only on hope.
As for prostaglandin analogues such as bimatoprost (Latisse) and latanoprost, they do seem to be great at fostering eyelash growth, but I've yet to hear a single success-story in their use against scalp-baldness. A study was published, earlier in 2011, of latanoprost's application in getting hair to grow in a species of monkey, but not only was this a monkey, but results were underwhelming with a concentration 10X that found in a current prescription of the compound. Maybe something will work out, but, myself, I don't believe this road will lead to a brilliant result.
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