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JohnBob

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  1. It has proven to be safe in animals and Tsuji has regulatory authorization to start clinal trials. The consensus is that the worst that can happen is that the cloned hair cells start to get undifferentiated in scalp and become normal skin and the hair disappears. That's why it was a breakthrough that Tsuji managed to get the cloned hairs to cycle at least 3 times according to their announcement from yesterday.
  2. A single example? Most people don't get results with fina. Do you think, for example, Gatsby never tried fina or almost every treatment available in the book? Those show cases you are seeing on the internet are the 0,01% outliers. I'm not saying this to discourage you, maybe you will be an outlier as well. Also I don't want to derail this thread with this topic. I think we can go back to Tsuji and hair cloning.
  3. Look man, this "boomer logic" kind of insult doesn't add anything to the debate. Consider stoping it. Minox and finasteride doesn't work well for most people and have been around for decades. HTs have evolved but that's pretty much it. On the other hand, hair cloning, if it works on humans, will be a practical cure. There are tons of press articles about new revolutionary treatments that promised commercial availability in 5 years and ended up totally folding. Google is your friend if you don't believe in my words. I'm not going to discuss such simple verifiable facts anymore.
  4. He is speaking the truth. Back in 2005 people in the forums were sure the cure was just around the corner. Each and every year the news of a new treatment would pop with the statement that in 5 years it would be commercially available. And then 5 years would pass and nothing would happen. But one day this cursed cycle will be broken.
  5. So just to be clear. Intercytex and ARI were trying to rejuvenate old dormant follicles. What Tsuji/Stemson are doing is totally different. They are creating new hairs from scratch. This is more complex but has better chances of succeeding IMO. And they are far ahead too since they already demonstrated the technology works in animals.
  6. Progress in biotech takes time, we are talking decades here. It took literarily 20+ years and BILLIONS in funding before the mRNA technology finally had its first use case with the covid vaccines.
  7. So in a nutshell Tsuji demonstrated that they successfully cloned hair in mice that apparently even cycled normally. This is a first. Intercytex or ARI didn't even come remotely close to that. The challenge now is to do clinical trials see if the findings translate to human hair. Huge challenge and Melvin is right to be skeptical but steps are definitely happening in the right direction. We also have Stemson, a well structured company that had similar results in mice with a different cloning approach and now are about to perfect the procedure in pigs to prepare for human trials too.
  8. I'll have to disagree on that Melvin. Intercytex and ARI never showed anything with substance to back their claims. Tsuji, on the other hand, have scientific studies published and even a paper on Nature demonstrating the successful creation of a cloned hair in mice. Same for Stemson. You may say cloned hairs on mice are a far cry from the cure and I agree, but we now have a working proof of concept of hair cloning. Its an advance that we didn't have before, so I would say the hair cloning field is indeed progressing (albeit not in the speed we want).
  9. Another fall out can happen but I expect someone or some company will eventually get it right. I think that path is the future of the hair transplant industry
  10. Yes. Both Tsuji's and Stemson's versions of hair cloning will involve the the implantation of the cloned cells onto the scalp. Only instead of transplanting a hair graft, it will be used a hair germ with the cloned cells so to speak. Each hair germ will result in one new hair follicle. Both companies/docs said they would like the current HT surgeons doing it, as it will demand similar skills of a traditional hair transplant (minus the donor extraction part). Stemson even has two HT doctors from SoCal (where they are based) in their board of advisors: https://stemsontx.com/team/ This is the future of HTs folks.
  11. Thanks for https://www.hairlosscure2020.com for noticing and reporting it first! Do you guys think this finally is going to be it? Depending on the news - say they already started clinical trials and show a cloned hair implanted and growing on a human being - the hair loss world will be torn upside down! Imagine the best HT surgeons being able to implant an unlimited amount of hair follicles, not even the sky will be a limit!
  12. @Melvin-Moderator is a post op from your last procedure? Is the dark part part of you scalp (front) thicker than the rest? Did you plan to implant more grafts per cm2 there compared to the rest of your scalp?
  13. How do you think he compares with Dr. Couto (since you had surgery with him)?
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