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bismarck

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Posts posted by bismarck

  1. On 3/31/2020 at 11:53 AM, Rolandas said:

    Thanks! I'm really into editing and a bit OCD, so both this topic as well as my videos are taking a lot of my attention :D 
    I am on Fin 1mg/day + Nizoral + vitamins

     

    That's a great approach to having your best chance for success. Just try not to look in the mirror or take selfies every 5 minutes if you can, you will thank me later.

    Now it is just a waiting game. I anticipate a great yield for you. Perfect timing with the quarantine.

  2. 32 minutes ago, CosmoKramer said:

    Hospital executives and brass know what’s  important above all else...$$$$$$

    https://fortune.com/2020/03/31/coronavirus-shortages-hospitals-doctors-fired-face-masks-ppe/

    Yeah but if we were in China we'd be put in jail or killed for speaking out against the government. At what point does "concealing the truth to avoid panic" become "lying to lead people to the slaughter"? Hospitals are disgusting right now. Avoid unless very sick.

    The heroism and tragedy of Li Wen Liang makes me so mad. We have got to get it the fuck together.

  3. 17 minutes ago, CosmoKramer said:

    I think it's a 50:50 chance that plaquenil will work as a meaningful ionophore, I suspect those results are apocryphal. Hopefully not. 

    But make no mistake, there will be another pandemic after this one. Whether it's COVID 20 in the fall or another zoonotic crossover. These infections are becoming more frequent and more deadly with China's increasing population, urbanization, and their absurd love of wet markets. They literally have already opened the markets back up and kicked out the journalists.

    If they don't fix it, we will have to enact a long term travel ban on China. It is a troubled country with little to no business ethics at the cost of human lives and individuality. You could see this with Tiananmen Square, Mao Ze Dong, Chiang Kai Shek, the warring states, it has been going on for thousands of years. We are not going to stop it with tariffs and UN sanctions.  A travel ban will be the only solution, which will certainly destabilize world peace efforts. Unfortunately, the Chinese are giving us no other choice. If we do not isolate them, we will degenerate into a broken shell of our former selves. Hantavirus, SARS, COVID 20, each wave will make us progressively weaker till we finally can't fight back.

    People are not talking about it because it's not politically correct, but the Chinese have got to evolve their shitty dietary practices. It's a strange combination of a rural country background with the most rapid urbanization the world has ever seen. The perfect storm.

    • Like 2
  4. Trump finally just acknowledged the death count to projected at 240k in a best case scenario. That's twice the number of Americans that died in World War I and the number of soldiers that died in World War II. Without extending the shutdown, we are looking at 1.5 to 2.2 million, which would be the greatest disaster the United States has ever faced. Period.

    So 2% should be taken the fuck seriously.

    I think it's pretty irresponsible to refer to this as the flu or fear mongering, as some in this thread have been suggesting. Even the title of this thread seems absurd at this point. There is not going to be a hair transplant industry for most of 2020. And certainly no meaningful new research or procedural development for 5-10 years after if the depression happens.

    • Like 2
  5. I don't know the details of that article but a lot of ventilation is putting the body on shutdown until it can recover -- this applies to heart attacks, strokes, sepsis, treatable cancer, etc. You really are dancing on a razor's edge in the ICU even in good times. Death is everywhere.

    Right now, things are horrible. Particularly in New York but LA is following close behind. Docs, nurses and support staff are getting sick. Everything elective is shut down. When you're overwhelmed at that level, crazy shit is gonna happen and mistakes are going to sky rocket. It's just human nature. You couldn't even run a Chipotle at the pace hospitals are going right now, and intubation is harder than making a burrito bowl.

  6. 9 minutes ago, gillenator said:

    I think everything you contribute in these threads is helpful my friend.

    I want to make a distinction...a dormant follicle is simply in the resting phase...it is not a dead follicle....once rested it will enter a new growth phase and why even though it may be transplanted while dormant, it can potentially still grow again.

    Does that make sense?

    Yes I agree. I would add that this is true only if the dermal papillae/stem cell are transplanted, not if its the shaft or some other part of the hair follicle (ie. the stem or root). And if a follicle is in telogen, the chances of getting the stem cell perfectly are unlikely if you can't see it, particularly because you're not even aiming for that hair, you're aiming for the one that you can actually see.

    There's been a lot of discussion about this in the past, I think the answer was no one knew if dormant follicles were being successfully transplanted, it stands to reason that some are, but if it's by blind luck, it's probably not many. In those with denser donor hair more often, in those with less dense donor hair less often. It would be pretty tough to test this hypothesis so I'm not sure of what use it is at this point.

    Remember Nigam's supposed "stem cell duplication" from a few years back? He was trying to divide stem cells intentionally under high magnification and didn't have much success.

  7. Ah let me explain.

    Here is a hair follicle:

    image.png.0fe53709f181ef1c41703d813a1735b8.png

    I would imagine that, even with magnification loupes, these would be pretty hard to see if dormant. So if an adjacent "sleeping" follicle is partially removed, all that brings with it is cellular debris. My guess is that this dead follicle  would cause some inflammation when implanted next to a living follicle (as opposed to the surrounding connective tissue/plug). I could be totally wrong though, it might bring growth factors and extracellular matrix with it that helps growth, or induce just the right amount of hormesis to promote follicle development.

    I should have probably just not said anything, it's really not a helpful theoretical discussion.

  8. Keser 

    On 2/8/2020 at 8:11 AM, Portugal25 said:

    Dr. Keser is slightly more expensive at 3.5€/graft and also has some subpar results like every other Doctor (and many insanely amazing ones too) but he is totally devoted to just 1 patient per day and implants with stick&place which is the same technique as Dr. Konior one of the best in the world (8$/graft).

    I really haven't come across a subpar result from Keser here. You mean on other forums?

  9. 18 minutes ago, Rolandas said:

    I think dissection of grafts should be done only in very limited situation e.g. if there's not enough singles. Everything else is pretty much possible to see while extracting. If surgeon is not in a rush and does 1500-2000 grafts a day (even with motorized) he can spend more time to look around for better grafts that he needs.

    Rolando, I believe splitting is more often done with FUT type techniques where you don't have as much ability to choose finer follicles for the frontal hairline, but I'm not sure about this.

    Perhaps doing a combined FUE/FUT would be a wiser choice in scenarios involving finer frontal hairline work as it would allow you more flexibility in choosing donors.

    I agree though, you are really putting the follicle at risk of being damaged if not done correctly.

  10. There's also a great deal of variability in how you count splits.

    Let's say you have a bundle of three hairs and you implant three separately to your hairline -- is that 3 grafts or 1? Does the extraction or implantation matter? I think the Spanish docs might have a different standard of counting compared to other clinics, possibly because they take such a large punches.

    Again the results are phenomenal but the donor looks way more chewed up too -- the yield comes at a cost.

    On 2/11/2019 at 2:31 AM, fueme said:

    His work on youtube is absolutely amazing and I know on all the forums he is said to be one of the best but I'm struggling to find actual reviews by patients. Would it be possible for you to share the link to some of these reviews?

    Here you go

  11. You made the right choice--I would place Hattingen with the 'hyper-elites' of transplantation (ie. with Couto, Konior, Keser, Hasson and Lorenzo). Their clinic has an almost obsessive level of attention to detail that I have rarely seen elsewhere. 

    I believe the surgeon(s) are actually Laura and Severe Muresanu a husband/wife duo. Hattingen is the town and clinic where they operate.

    This is FUT, correct? And what medical hair loss treatments have you tried or are you using? Are you on finasteride/dutasteride, ketoconazole or minoxidil?

    Please keep us updated, I think you are going to have an amazing result by the end of the quarantine.

     

  12. I mean we shouldn't lose perspective. The average American, regardless of age, is more likely to die from the coronary artery disease they develop being sedentary during a prolonged lockdown and from the alcohol they drink during the following unemployment than they are ever likely to die from COVID 19.

    What I respect about the murkiness and ambiguity of the hair loss industry is that it's taught me to have a healthy skepticism of authority figures and popular opinion alike -- I'll believe it when I can run a comb through it. Hair multiplication, piloscopy, hair tonics, fue/fut, anybody that follows hair loss for awhile develops a real strong distrust of anybody claiming to have 'the cure' or 'the answer'. At the same time, if you're on this forum it means that in addition to skepticism, you still remember how to hope for something better. That even in the midst of a shitty situation, something good can happen.

    So that's where we have to be my fellow hair loss sufferers. Let's take the lessons the industry has taught us about emotional resilience, skepticism and optimism and apply them to an international crisis on a scale most of us have never seen. God only knows where this will end up. I hope everyone is okay by the time things are through.

    We have a duty to think of the most intelligent response, and that is balancing quarantine with economic slowing. Lives will be lost no matter what we do, the key is finding the lowest point on the curve till we reach the inflection point.

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