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Originally Posted by gutted
transplanted hairs dont fall out cause over time androgen levels natrually decline and the people who get transplants are usually individuals who are in thier 30s/40's/50's etc at which point in thier life this androgen level decline occurs.
Also people who get transplants are usually norwood 4/5/6/7 - at this point the problem was already addressed by the immune system hence why it no longer causes any damage to the newly transplanted hairs. There is nothing differnet than balding hairs and transplanted hairs, depsite what you may have been told.
I agree with you in that individual hair "genetics" is hogwash. The areas that men thin and completely lose there hair follows the area known as the galea aponeurotica. If this is considered coincidence then people need to take a hard look at there over all reasoning. Again I wonder if all of these possible causes, DHT, PGD2, inflammation are not all but one of a two part process to induce balding. Or rather that you need a tight galea aponeurotica for anything to actually cause genetic hair loss and that the genetic is merely the shape at which you scalp is constructed and the degree to which mucles pull on this area. Everything else is just environmental factors increasing or decreasing these DHT or PGD2's.hhmmmmm.....
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Originally Posted by 2020
bingo! I think that study actually says something about that where PGD2 levels go up right after hair changes its cycle
loool dude here is the study which clarifies this for you -> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14632179
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Senior Member
Originally Posted by gutted
what are you saying?
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Originally Posted by 2020
what are you saying?
what i said in the last post...this study confirms it.
Last edited by gutted; 06-18-2012 at 06:27 PM.
Reason: typo
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Senior Member
Originally Posted by gutted
what i said in the last post...this study confirms it.
this was your LAST POST:
???
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Originally Posted by 2020
this was your LAST POST:
???
>>>>
i suspect its highly elevated in the telogen phase of the hair and is in low numbers in the other growth phases.
Its only logical to find an abudance of pgd2 in the balding scalp since [B]most of the follicles are in the RESTING PHASE
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Senior Member
Originally Posted by gutted
>>>>
i suspect its highly elevated in the telogen phase of the hair and is in low numbers in the other growth phases.
Its only logical to find an abudance of pgd2 in the balding scalp since [B]most of the follicles are in the RESTING PHASE
it would be interesting to test this on body hair.... if PGD2 is elevated in "bald spots" on your body, then your theory would be right
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Originally Posted by 2020
it would be interesting to test this on body hair.... if PGD2 is elevated in "bald spots" on your body, then your theory would be right
its not a theory, the study is there, all be it on mice...
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Originally Posted by gutted
its not a theory, the study is there, all be it on mice...
What regulates PG levels?
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Originally Posted by neversaynever
What regulates PG levels?
cox 2 enzyme.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14632179
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