Thursday, March 28, 2013

Cures for baldness: hair-raising science

Cures for baldness: hair-raising science

With radical transplant techniques and revolutionary formulae for regrowth, men – and the women who love them – may be looking forward to a luxuriantly hirsute future. Tim Lott investigates


The Observer,
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk

Tim Lott
Tim Lott
Tim Lott
Tim Lott goes under the clippers at his brother's
 Soho barber shop. Photograph: Suki Dhanda for the Observer

It is some time now since I started to worry about baldness – somewhere between the retreat of the already fine hair at my temples in my early 30s and the final failing of the last growth of hair at my crown a few years back.

I had been trying to convince myself that things might not be too bad for the past 20 years. But at the beginning of this year, at the age of 55, an encounter with a ceiling-mounted mirror revealed to me what was doubtless obvious to others – a monkish, thinning crown. There was no longer any doubt about it. I was definitely more bald than not.

My wife, Rachael, wanted me to take it all off and be done with it. It was an option that made me nervous. My brother, Jack, a professional hairdresser for 20-odd years, advised me to hold on to what little I had. He had witnessed many times the shock, usually unpleasant, that men felt when they finally did clip or shave their hair.

I retained a sentimental attachment to what remained of my hair. After all, it had once been my pride and joy. In my teenage years, during the summer, it was cornstalk yellow, and I wore it long and wild. I considered it to be one of the few effective items of mating display available to me, and its relentless disappearance was a matter of grave regret.

But regrets were not going to get my locks back. So, against the advice of my own brother, I turned up at Jack's salon, determined, at last, to go for The Chop.

I may be ONE OF THE LAST generation of men who face this dilemma. In December last year, scientists at the Berlin Technical University revealed they had grown the world's first artificial hair follicles from stem cells. The leader of the research team claimed that within five years millions of hair-loss sufferers could grow new hair from their own stem cells and have it implanted into their bald spots. In January this year a study by the University of Pennsylvania suggested that bald men were not bald at all – it was simply that their stem cells were producing growths too fine to be visible to the human eye. According to the team leader, Dr George Cotsarelis, "The fact that there are normal numbers of stem cells in a bald scalp gives us hope for reactivating those stem cells."

Then, in February, researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles found that a chemical called Astressin B showed "astounding" results for hair regrowth after one jab per day for just five days. The tests were on mice, but the researchers were confident that a cure for baldness could be found in five to 10 years.

Finally, in March, a British company called Nanogen announced that their scientists had pioneered a brand new technology to combat hair loss. The new technology had "been designed to improve hair growth and even re-awaken dormant hair follicles". The company claimed to have developed a new "growth factor complex" (sh-VEGF) which would stimulate hair-follicle growth on balding scalps.

Taken together, this seemed to herald a revolution. Over the years there has been no shortage of unrealistic headlines promising an end to baldness – but most of this new research seemed to emanate from respectable academic institutions, and all of them seemed to be promising the same thing – the End of Bald.

Mopping up? ... James Nesbitt before and after his hair transplant.
Mopping up? ... James Nesbitt before and after his hair transplant. Photograph: Ken McKay/Richard Young/Rex Features

Even if the research proved to be disappointing in the long run, there appeared to be other developments in the world of hair repair taking place, too – not in biochemistry, but in the technology of hair weaving and transplants.

Actor James Nesbitt spent tens of thousands of pounds on what appeared to be a remarkably successful hair transplant. "They've changed my life. It's horrible going bald. Anyone who says it isn't is lying," said Nesbitt. Instead of the pitted sprouting potato look seen on many unfortunate recipients of hair transplants, Nesbitt's hair looks convincing enough to help land him – he believed – major new roles that he would otherwise have been denied.

The success of the transplant doubtless had something to do with the amount of money he could afford to spend on the job, but in the past hard cash didn't always solve the problem. "All that money and he's still got hair like a dinner lady," spat Boy George of Elton John, who has appeared to unsuccessfully confront his receding hairline with various ineffectual treatments over the years.

But this time, the transplants were actually pretty convincing. What was going on? There were rumours that a new hair-transplant technique – FUE, or Follicular Unit Extraction, which transplants follicles from the back of the head one by one instead of in a long strip – used robot technology to enable thousands of follicles to be replanted at once, thus producing a more sophisticated and convincing result. Perhaps a new crop of hair could be bought, right now, without having to wait for genetic science to take the necessary leap forward.

At my brother's hairdressing shop in London's Soho, I paced the floor. I'd spent the past week in a sunny clime gaining a tan in an attempt to minimise the impact, but listening to Jack revving up his clippers made me antsy in the extreme.

I lowered myself nervously into the chair. This would be the end of all choice – other than one, two, three or four, the settings on Jack's clippers. A "number one" was the bonehead cut, the number four the "suede head". I decided to go for the most modest option, the number four.

As I watched the hair cascade from my scalp, I was surprised how much of it I still had left. There was still bulk at the sides and the back, but that was now disappearing in clumps on to Jack's floor. I watched with a combination of fascination and anxiety. The procedure didn't seem to require too much artistry – clip, flip, drop, buzz, zip. Jack started with a channel down the centre of the head, just for fun I think, so I would look genuinely like a 50s mental patient, then took the rest off. The process probably lasted no more than 20 minutes. I kept asking Jack to change the music to something more calming.

Then it was over. Jack smiled, and dusted the back of my neck with talcum powder. I ran my hand over my head to feel the sharp, angry stubble, checked in the mirror then went into the bathroom and checked the mirror there.

How did I feel? I felt happy.

I had never felt so clean, and so… straightforward. It was no nonsense, it was real, it was me. I liked it.

I suddenly had no idea what the fuss about being bald was all about.

Why does baldness matter so much to men? The thinker and notable bald person, Alain de Botton, recalls his own grief when his hair began to disappear in his late teens.

"It was very distressing and frustrating," he says. "It stood in the way of being confident about myself and undermined my sense of how attractive I was to women. Even at the age of 40 I still think of it as an unfortunate thing in my life. But I see it as being almost analogous to a disability. It isn't simply vanity – most people do look worse without hair."

De Botton also notes that it is not subject to social inhibition in the way other shortcomings might be. "It is completely acceptable to laugh at a bald person in a way that it simply isn't at a fat person."

His distress is not unusual. Stories of men – and women – becoming suicidal after hair loss are not uncommon. This is not just about looks, but mortality, the passage of time.

"It is a paradigm of ageing, a signal of loss of control over our bodies on a continuum with, say, losing the ability to stand up or the loss of a faculty," says De Botton. "We suddenly become describable as just an old biddy or an old fool. Baldness quickly swallows up a person, like 'just' a fat person or an ill person."

Murray Healy, journalist and author of the book Gay Skins: Class, Masculinity and Queer Appropriation, points out that losing hair naturally is "seeming to fail, which is a bad thing. Thinning hair is, in a sense, the equivalent of a 'failed crop'." By which he means a failed agricultural rather than tonsorial crop.

He suggests unhappiness at not having hair is to do with a sense of shame, rather than any objective reality; and that if one is bold and does nothing to conceal the loss, and in fact emphasises it by shaving, it can signify the opposite of failure – confidence in one's own masculinity. This is a fairly recent phenomenon, which can be traced back to the hyper-masculinity advertised by the original skinheads in the 60s and 70s, a hairstyle which was then appropriated and lionised by the gay community in the 80s and 90s and turned into the opposite signal.

By the time Bruce Willis and David Beckham started to crop their hair, shaven-headedness had gone Mainstream Hetero. The white-van man and metrosexual alike, the baldness sufferer and the style surfer, were all flocking to have their hair clippered to the minimum length. "Celebrities shaving their heads brought a different interpretation to baldness entirely," says Healy. "From when Trevor Sorbie started to makeover men with cropped hair on daytime TV in the early 90s, the meaning changed."

But what about those who are not convinced by Trevor Sorbie or Bruce Willis? Is there really hope for them, with the new research discoveries and fresh techniques for hair transplantation? Probably not, according to GP and medical journalist Dr James Le Fanu, author of The Rise and Fall of Modern Medicine.

"You have to be incredibly sceptical about stem cells and anything where people say in five years' time we'll do such and such," says Le Fanu. "Stem-cell technology appears to offer the moon. Regeneration and regenerative medicine is often presented as the answer to everything in the universe. But actually there's nothing in the bank."

Balding, Le Fanu points out, is deeply mysterious, even counter-intuitive. "Nobody knows why you get balder as you get older. It's an anomaly. It doesn't fit." Because, Le Fanu explains, people with lower levels of testosterone (which usually comes with ageing) should theoretically enjoy better hair growth. After all, castrati never lose their hair, because they don't produce testosterone. "There is some link between hair loss and testosterone, but no one knows what it is."

Le Fanu isn't all negative. He claims that hair transplants are pretty good nowadays and recommends drugs such as Regaine (Minoxidil), which induces hair growth in 30-40% of people. He notes that "increasing circulation to the scalp also appears to promote hair growth. The Japanese have a special hair brush which they use to massage the scalp 200 times a day to increase blood flow. This is said to improve hair growth."

Le Fanu, though knowledgeable, is not a hair-loss specialist. The closest I could get to an independent expert, Dr Bessam Farjo, is medical director of both the Institute of Trichologists and the Farjo Medical Centre in Manchester, which specialises in hair transplants. Farjo respected calls for scepticism, but was cautiously optimistic that real progress is being made.

"The importance of George Cotsarelis's research is in showing that stem cells are not lost when people lose their hair," says Farjo. "It's just that a certain kind of cell – the progenitor cell – is missing. If the hair is still there and the cells are still there, the hope is that the cell can be 'kick started' to produce new hair growth.

"The UCLA experiments with Astressin B underline the case for linking hair loss with stress – the mice in the experiment lost hair when put under stress and regained it when the Astressin B was introduced. Furthermore, the German research is the first time to my knowledge that artificial hair follicles have been grown in a laboratory. This could be very promising."

The "growth factor", sh-VEGF, that Nanogen claims to have discovered, and which can supposedly "reawaken dormant hair follicles", is also significant, according to Farjo. "A growth factor sets off protein in the body that triggers various processes... they flow in the body naturally. But a growth factor can also retard growth as well as promote it. The research is all about trying to figure out how to introduce more of the positive growth factors."

Farjo emphasises that "curing" baldness – which, after all, is completely natural and therefore doesn't require a cure – is still a long way off. "We definitely have a lot more information now than five or 10 years ago – but curing baldness could, in the long run, be as difficult as curing cancer."

Farjo recommends hair transplants for those seeking a quick solution – which, he says, have greatly progressed. However, the idea that James Nesbitt has been the benefactor of a new robotic FUE technique is simply wrong. Nesbitt had a conventional "strip harvesting" process. He was just lucky, had a good surgeon, and it took well.

"Robot technology has simply not been achieved yet to the level where it can be used," says Farjo. "And there is no real difference in quality between strip harvesting and FUE – it's just a matter of how serious a scar you leave at the back of the head."

Talking of scars – psychological rather than physical – the big test for me was going home after my crop. It was, after all, my wife who had nagged me for years to get my hair taken off and, as usual, I cravenly sought her approval.

Somewhat predictably, for the first day, she didn't even notice. I had to resort to blocking her off in a corridor and asking her the pointed question: "Well?" while raising my eyes to the crown of my head.

"Well what?" Rachael said, scanning me abstractedly, to work out what exactly I was talking about.

"Well?" I said, even more pointedly, lowering my head slightly so she might be able to get a better clue.

"Oh, your hair!" she said finally. She grimaced, then said, "I was hoping it would be shorter." Then she rushed off to an important appointment.

Clearly she was unimpressed, but then I was sure the style would grow on her – so to speak. Sure enough, when she returned from her appointment, she examined me critically, as if for the first time, and smiled. She clearly loved it.

"You look like a cancer patient," she said, cheerfully, and went to make some tea. Perhaps a comb over wouldn't be such a bad idea after all.
 

Monday, March 25, 2013

Laser therapy – Lexington HairMax LaserComb

Laser therapy – Lexington HairMax LaserComb


Source: beverlyhillshr.com

Starting to lose your hair but don’t think you are a candidate for a hair transplant? If you are looking to prevent future hair loss or just achieve more fullness, laser therapy is an excellent choice. Schedule at BHHR for a preventative consultation and learn about your options.

We currently offer the Lexington HairMax Laser Comb to both our male and female patients who are looking to prevent future hair loss. Laser light in the red spectrum and with the appropriate power output has been clinically proven to be beneficial for cutaneous medicine. In addition, the HairMax LaserComb has a patented hair parting mechanism. This combined with the precise alignment of the hair parting teeth to the individual direct beam lasers provides a true direct path for the laser light to effectively bathe the scalp. Learn more about how it works.

 

ATP Nature

Energy is the power and ability to be physically and mentally active. Continuous energy supply is needed for the functioning of vital processes in living things inclusive of both plants and animals. The vital processes include metabolic activities, DNA and protein synthesis, transport of molecules and ions, exchange of minerals, breakdown of food to produce energy, removal of waste products from the body, exchange of gases in the body and so on which are symbolic of life in an organism. The biological molecule adenosine triphosphate, or the ATP, stimulates individual cell activity. ATP is responsible for the transport of energy in the cell. Laser light trapped in the mitochondria of the cell is transferred to produce ATP. ATP synthesis is similar to photosynthesis in plants.

Action of enzyme ATP synthetase on ATP releases the endmost phosphate group. It is an exothermic process and releases a large amount of energy, which is used by the organisms to carry out vital cell functions including protein synthesis. Enzyme acts as a catalyst and triggers the process process.

 

ATP and Laser Light Stimulation

Specific wavelengths of certain lasers are found to increase cell activity as a result of ATP production. Different wavelengths can stimulate the cell activity to different extent.

The HairMax LaserComb energizes the weakened follicles by a laser beam. The hair follicles are stimulated by the laser beam of optimum wavelength. This increases vascularization and cellular metabolism. With the increase in cell activity the circulation of blood is also promoted. Blood flow and circulation in the scalp is enhanced by laser energy. Increased blood flow promotes the growth of a healthy hair follicle.

Blood flow facilitates the access of important nutrients to the follicle and removal of harmful wastes such as DHT. Ample supply of nutrients boosts the hair follicle and the removal of waste makes them healthier. With increased cellular metabolism and cellular activity, a weakened follicle is transformed into a healthy one which in turn results in beautiful, bouncy hair. This invigoration of the hair follicle accounts for healthier hair, prevention of further hair loss and stimulation for the re-growth of hair. Hence, this mitigates the problems accounting to hair loss.

*The HairMax LaserComb is cleared by the FDA for The Promotion of Hair Growth in males with Androgenetic Alopecia who have Norwood Hamilton Classifications of IIa-V and Fitzpatrick Skin Types I to IV.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Nanotechnology Tackles Balding as Nanomedicine Prototype Promotes Hair Growth

Nanotechnology Tackles Balding as Nanomedicine Prototype Promotes Hair Growth

Published on March 26, 2008 at 11:33 AM
Source: azonano.com
 
Luna Innovations Incorporated announced today the discovery that a nanomedicine prototype aids in the growth of new hair follicles. Scientists at Luna's nanoWorks Division in Danville, VA, have been developing a portfolio of new candidates based on antioxidant nanomaterials which could lead to a platform technology for treating a wide range of diseases. "One of our new nanomedicine prototypes, after only two weeks of treatment, was found to increase the number of hair follicles fourfold in mice which are born genetically hairless," said Robert Lenk, President of Luna's nanoWorks Division.

Hair growth is a process that normally depends on the regeneration of tiny hair follicles. Hairless mice have a mutation that results in atrophy of hair follicles a few weeks after birth. The hair does not regenerate. The gene responsible for the mutation in the hairless mice has been identified, however the biological processes that cause the follicle to atrophy are not well understood.

Luna is working with scientists at The Hamner Institutes for Health Sciences to further pursue their discovery in the hope of identifying a therapeutic aide to potentially treat male pattern baldness. In addition to hair loss due to heredity, Luna's discovery may also aid in hair regeneration for loss due to other medical conditions.

"What we have uncovered thus far is extremely exciting because it sheds new insights into the underlying processes responsible for keeping hair follicles healthy," said Lenk. "We know that hair follicles cycle between growth and atrophy naturally. These new results reveal that the balance can be tipped towards promoting follicle growth in hairless mice. Our hope is this discovery may eventually translate into a new class of medicines promoting hair growth in people who are balding."

Luna's program in nanomedicine is focused on using proprietary antioxidant technology to identify therapeutic candidates that are targeted with nanometer-scale precision to sites where pathogenic free radicals are produced. Luna is developing a portfolio of new therapeutic candidates that may address a number of diseases which are caused by free radicals.

"This is an example of how Luna's innovative business model can help to identify candidates for potential products that we hope will some day improve people's lives," said Kent Murphy, Chairman and CEO of Luna Innovations. "The discovery that Luna's nanomedicine candidate can potentially promote hair growth, an unexpected result of other research being performed at Luna, indicates that hair follicle atrophy can be reversed. We believe this may be the beginning of a generation of nanomedicines aimed at changing outcomes in intractable diseases."

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Galeatomy what is it?

Galeatomy what is it?


Source: goodbyehairloss.blogspot.com
Author: Dr. Bishan Mahadevia
Date: Wednesday, February 10, 2010


 
 
 
SCALP has 5 layers (S: Skin C: Cutaneous Tissue A: Apponurosis (Galea) L: Loose Areolar Tissue P: Pericranium)
According to one theory it was believed that 3rd Layer Galea or Apponurosis which is a a tough sheet like layer under the skin tightens over the blood vessels passing through it to the skin and does not allow enough blood to pass through it to the skin. This leads to hair loss. Well this theory is never been proven. Galeatomy as a procedure is there for many years now and not new; is deviced with the hope that by cutting this constricting layer blood vessels will carry more blood to the skin and will therefore control the hair loss. This theory was never been proven and those who have performed this surgery in the past have never substantiated this belief. This procedure which I have no personal experience of has never been supported by even international association like ISHRS where hair loss specialists from around the world are active. It is also important to note that most of the scalp blood supply come from front and back of the head and not from the underneath the Galea and those vessels above the Galea and they do not have to cross the Galea. There are few surgeons in Belgium who promote this but have perhaps never presented their results in ISHRS.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Aderans Research – advancing hair regeneration™

Aderans Research – advancing hair regeneration™


Source: aderansresearch.com

 Aderans Research Institute (ARI)
A Cell-Based Alternative
Aderans Research Institute (ARI) is a leading commercial force in the field of hair regeneration, pioneering innovative cell-based solutions to the problems of pattern hair loss that affect millions of people around the world. Historically, hair transplantation has been limited by the number of available hairs on the head in question, but cellular regeneration may make it possible to multiply hairs, providing a potentially unlimited supply of hair growth for up to 80 million Americans suffering from pattern hair loss. With rejuvenated hair follicles producing healthy hair, people can get back to the business of leading confident, productive lives.

We invite anyone facing the challenge of hair loss to consider participating in our clinical study clinical study.

 

Hailed as a breakthrough in the science of hair loss, cellular hair regeneration is a cutting-edge technique that promises to address the riddle of the finite number of hair follicles. In the past, hair loss treatments, including surgical transplantation or medication, faced a troublesome problem: the finite number of hairs on an individual's head limited the degree of redistribution possible. Once a person begins to lose hair, his or her supply of hair-generating follicles necessarily diminishes. For clients who are considerably bald, there often isn't enough hair on the back of the head to make up for the loss on top, leaving the client with a make-do patchwork of thinly implanted follicles.



Cellular hair regeneration offers a remarkable solution to the problem. By encouraging follicular cells to reproduce themselves via a method ARI calls the Ji Gami™ process, practically an unlimited number of hair-generating cellular units can be produced. During this process, often called hair multiplication or hair cloning, a small piece of tissue is removed from the neckline. Cells are cultivated in controlled conditions where they are encouraged to multiply by the addition of proprietary growth media. When enough new cells are formed, they are returned to the scalp, where they are injected and elicit new hair growth and thickness, ultimately producing more hair than the client had before. Candidates for hair regeneration may no longer be limited by the number of hairs on their head. ARI envisions a time when crowns (vertex) can be covered with full, natural hair regardless of the degree of hair loss.



It should be noted that ARI treatments are entirely autologous. That means ARI only attempts to generate hair growth using the participant's own hair. No foreign growth media, such as plant- or animal-derived growth factors, are involved. When the cultivated hair cells are restored to the participant's scalp, he or she is only receiving his or her hair cells. This serum–free process delivers a degree of safety from complications unique to the field.

Please view the short video that explains the procedure in detail:

 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Hair Loss Prevention - Baldness Preventation - Galeatomy

Hair Loss Prevention - Baldness Preventation - Galeatomy


Source: wellnesskliniek.com

Galeatomy prevents hair loss - baldness.

Hair loss prevention wth galeatomy: Galeatomy is a plastic surgical operation which regulates the blood flow to the scalp and the sebaceous glands. The Wellness Kliniek in Belgium has been performing this endoscopic operation for over 10 years. The results are evaluated according to ISO 9001 standards.

More than 98% of patients are absolutely satisfied and would recommend this treatment.
  

Hair Loss : Galeatomy: prevents baldness

If you notice that your hair is thinning or feels lank it is better to take action straight away.

Prevention is the message! Prevention is better than cure.

A galeatomy, a procedure performed under local anaesthetic :
  • Prevents further hair loss.
  • Stimulates new hair growth.
  • Makes your hair healthy again.

Hairloss - Baldness: the causes

Hair roots constantly form new hairs, therefore healthy hair growth requires high doses of vitamin and minerals. Certain shortages in these important minerals, vitamins and enzymes can result in hair loss, split ends, dull and dry hair which is hard to brush.

Stress and medication can also cause hair loss. In some people hair loss and renewal is cyclical with periods of more intense hair loss. This form of “cyclical” hair loss can be compared with the seasonal moulting which occurs in other mammals and is usually no cause for concern.
 

Hair loss- in men and women

In the vast majority of men suffering from hair loss the villain bears the latin name alopecia androgenetica. This hereditary form of hair loss is also called 'classic male baldness'. In women the most common cause of hair loss is hereditary.

The condition is still being investigated. It is possible that in women the influence of hormones play a different role than in men. Less common causes of hair loss are thyroid gland conditions, insufficient iron, insufficient vitamins and minerals, high temperatures, an operation or a general anaesthetic, so-called 'crash diets', childbirth, and some forms of medication. If hair loss is not the result of any of these non-hereditary causes then the problem can usually be treated.

There are also certain scalp conditions which can lead to temporary or permanent hair loss, such as lupus, lichen planopilaris and alopecia areata.

Don't forget that the average adult loses between 75 and 125 hairs a day. This is the result of a natural process whereby certain hairs enter a dormant state (telogen) while others leave a dormant state (anagen): a new hair grows out of the follicle.

As long as this process is in balance the number of hairs on the head remains constant.

Another less important factor related to hair loss is stress. We suspect that stress results in an acceleration of hereditary hair loss. Stress alone probably doesn't cause hair loss without the necessary genetic and hormonal influences.

The classic form of hair loss in men and women is inherited from one of the parents and starts after puberty. Head hair which is genetically sensitive to alopecia androgenetica (usually at the front and sides of the temples) loses thickness and potential length per individual hair every 3 to 5 year 'lifecycle' until it eventually disappears completely. Unfortunately by the time a man starts to notice that his hair is getting thinner, he has already lost about 50% of his hair. The hair on the back of the head and on the sides of the skull is usually genetically permanent in most men, that is to say that it continues to grow throughout his lifetime.

When all medical causes have been excluded and / or treated, one can perform a surgical procedure : galeatomy to prevent further hair loss.

Stop hair loss! Treatment to prevent baldness

Hair loss - baldness is often, but not always hereditary. Men or women with this predisposition may experience extreme thinning of the hair.

A galeatomy can be the solution. React in time!

Hair loss: the surgery

The procedure was described decades ago and has undergone repeated technical improvements. In the Wellness Kliniek we have completely adapted the technique for the endoscopic method with minimal scarring and almost immediate recovery. During the procedure the hair surgeon makes a small incision above the temples. Using the endoscopic method the doctor changes the bloodflow to the scalp by loosening the galea and reworking a number of blood vessels. At the same time the stimulation of the sebaceous glands is altered. Bloodflow and feeling in the scalp is still guaranteed. Many patients claim that this procedure, undoubtedly works, with no exceptions. In women it can even encourge new hair growth. In men the effect is usually limited to preserving the remaining hair. Hence the message: 'Sooner rather than later'.
 

Galeatomy & Hair Transplantation

A galeatomy can be performed under a local anaestheti? The procedure lasts about 45 minutes. A galeatomy is often performed in combination with hair restoration surgery to prevent further hair loss.

There is no point in filling up a bald patch if the surrounding hair continues to fall out.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Histogen’s Hair Stimulating Complex (HSC): Revolutionary Hair Loss Treatment for Males with Androgenic Alopecia?

Histogen’s Hair Stimulating Complex (HSC): Revolutionary Hair Loss Treatment for Males with Androgenic Alopecia?


David / Fri 20 Jul 2012
Source: regrowhair.com

histogen.com
Over the past year, regenerative medicine company Histogen, Inc. has continued to test its highly anticipated hair loss treatment known as HSC (Hair Stimulating Complex). The latest phase in HSC’s ongoing trials began in Pasig City, Manila, Philippines on December 22, 2011 and will conclude in December 2012.

Androgenic alopecia (genetic baldness) affects an estimated 40 million men and 21 million women in the United States alone with many millions more worldwide. Approximately 7% of these hair loss sufferers, from the early stages of thinning hair to completely bald, currently seek medical and/or surgical hair restoration treatments to slow the progression of further balding and regrow hair. Though a relatively small number, this amounts to a highly competitive, multi-billion dollar industry.

Today’s most effective hair loss treatments are the clinically proven and FDA approved drugs Rogaine (minoxidil) and Propecia (finasteride) as well as state of the art follicular unit hair transplantation (FUT). However, a number of balding men and women also seek alternatives like low level laser therapy (LLLT) and herbal treatments among others. Each of these treatments has its own benefits and limitations but Histogen, Inc. hopes to add its new and potentially revolutionary injectable treatment to the list.

How HSC Works
According to the literature, “HSC consists of proteins secreted by human dermal cells under proprietary culture conditions that include reduced oxygen and bioreactors. Under these conditions, the cells secrete soluble proteins that include both growth factors and soluble precursors to the deposited extracellular matrix. Several of these proteins are known to be important in the control of the hair cycle and will stimulate resting hair follicles to resume hair formation”.

Interestingly, the importance of a low oxygen environment (hypoxia) has been cited as an important factor in reawakening dormant hair follicles by other researchers like French cosmetics giant L’Oreal whose upcoming hair growth lotion Neogenic also aims to revolutionize the hair restoration industry.

To learn more about Histogen’s Hair Stimulating Complex including the results of its pilot study see the article, Histogen Inc. Makes Headway in Pursuit of a Revolutionary Hair Loss Treatment

Conclusion
Only time will tell if HSC can deliver on its promise to stimulate new hair growth but, even if it lives up to its hype, it does not represent the fabled “hair loss cure” and will likely takes its place as an adjunct to the existing and proven hair loss treatments mentioned above.

For more on Histogen and to stay abreast of their progress, you are encouraged to add your comment to the discussion topic “Histogen” on our hair loss forum.


Friday, March 1, 2013

Alpecin Caffeine Shampoo

Alpecin Caffeine Shampoo


Source: alpecin.co.uk
Availability:

Alpecin Caffeine Shampoo
The shampoo that stimulates hair growth directly at the roots
 

Caffeine promotes hair growth. It has even been proven to slow down hereditary hair loss. Now you can transport this unique active ingredient to the hair roots during daily hair washing.
 
Alpecin Caffeine penetrates even though the shampoo is rinsed out. In just a short time (120 sec.), the active ingredient travels along the hair shaft directly into the hair follicles. If the shampoo is left on for longer, the caffeine will also penetrate into the scalp.
 
But there are also other reasons for men to really like this shampoo.
Based on the intentional omission of softeners (e.g. silicone), the hair structure improves after just a few hair washes with enhanced hair grip.
Fine and weakened hair becomes stronger and can be styled better.


(Information for competitive athletes: Alpecin Caffeine can be detected in hair follicles.)









INGREDIENTS
Aqua, Sodium Laureth Sulfate, Laureth-2, Disodium Laureth Sulfosuccinate, Sodium Lauroyl Glutamate, Sodium Chloride, Caffeine, Panthenol, Parfum, PEG-120 Methyl Glucose Dioleate, Hydrolyzed Wheat Protein, Citric Acid, Sodium Citrate, Menthol, PEG-40 Hydrogenated Castor Oil, Potassium Sorbate, Polyquaternium-7, Disodium EDTA, Sodium Benzoate, Zinc PCA, Niacinamide, Limonene, Tocopherol, Phenoxyethanol, Methylparaben, Propylparaben, CI 42090, CI 60730.

  • Caffeine activates the hair roots, prolongs the growth phase and improves hair growth.
  • Zinc and niacin are important growth factors for healthy hair roots.
 
 
FURTHER INFORMATION

Studies: