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Hair Restoration Discussion Forum - By and For Hair Loss Patients |
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| Future Medical treatments Discuss future possible treatments for hair loss like new drugs, gene therapy, hair follicle cloning, etc. |
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One thing is on our side, however. Profit motive. I just saw an interesting 20/20 with John Stossel on YouTube about the health care industry. Here is the relevant part 6.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=E_KCLm9cekU&feature=related According to them, the procedures that are not covered by insurance are where patients expect the most bang for their buck. Like Henry Ford and the Model-T, that is where theoretically the most innovation should be, and in practice this has applied to some cosmetic procedures, and Lasik eye surgery stands out as one of the most improved and cost dropping procedures. They say that in this time Lasik procedures improved from this competition, it didn't run stagnant. It's hard to know exactly how universal healthcare might be implemented in the United States, but in many countries the government sets the price for many surgeries. Obviously, HTs would not apply, so this could be an advantage for those who wish to profit off of us, and for us if we are willing to pay. (although possibly bad for others, if you believe the arguments against universal healthcare). I think that if there is a way to practically cure this (obviously a bigger IF than we may have believed a decade ago), then it should be found within the next 15 years (assuming universal healthcare in '08), because for every girl willing to spend $20,000 to fix herself up, there's gotta be a guy willing to spend $40,000 to get back the hair he had at 18. Hell, I'd drive a truck in Iraq for a year if I could get that back, and retain it. But then again, is there anybody here that gives a damn if they have a full head of hair in 15 years if they don't between now and then? |
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Now about that truck in Iraq you say ...?? |
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I know nothing about science. But I'd be interested in knowing how DHT actually binds to the hair follicle's androgen receptor or whatever. Is it through some kind of chemical? In what process does it bind to the follicle? What if we were simply to disrupt the process in which it binds to the receptor? Then we wouldn't lose anymore hair.
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Cure is a difficult word to define (even if it doesn't seem that way at first).
What constitutes a cure? A pill you can take to reverse hair loss? A combination of therapies/surgery/drugs to deal with hair loss and gain a new head of hair? Or is it removing the 'hair loss' gene altogether from the pool? I think a single, easily definable 'cure' is probably a long way off. The idea of being able to take a pill or just go get an injection or something is probably one step too far for at least the next decade and likely a fair while further than that. But a successful combination of therapies/procedures to reverse hair loss and gain new hair is probably very close. Already propecia/minoxidil and HTs can provide staggering results for even the worst baldness. In addition to that there are a plethora of new treatments and approaches in various stages of testing; everything from follicle neogenesis through to perhaps healing HT donor areas to regrow follicles, cell therapy and much more. I think we're well on our way to being able to cure the effects of hair loss and gain a new head of almost full density hair, but I think this 'cure' will be a combination of different approaches; something of a Frankenstein's school of medicine. But already the results we see every day are incredible and getting better at a near enough exponential rate. But, to put things in a realistic context, the 'magic bullet' for hair loss is probably not around the corner. Our generation and possibly even the one after it will have to work with a combination of approaches to achieve our results; but I think in 5-10 years the results you will be able to get will be nothing short of cosmetically fantastic, so have hope! We're a long way off making hair loss a 'thing of the past', but we're right around the corner from making hair loss a truly beatable problem. |
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Finasteride (Generic Propecia) controls hair loss by controlling the action of the enzyme alpha type II reductase. Finasteride restricts the production of dihydrotestosterone and also asserts the level of it low, which stops the hair loss and promotes hair regrowth.
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