| PP, name a respected mainstream medical practice that would facilitate this. I doubt you can. |
Which part? Xeljanz? It is prescribed for hair loss all the time. This is the Doctor at Yale that started prescribing it. https://brettkingmd.com/ There is another one at George Washington but you can go to anyone and get it prescribed. It's expensive though. Glucose monitors are over the counter. |
| PP here. Exosomes are also having good results but I don't recommend them because Hair Loss is the cosmetic manifestation of what is going on inside your body. Fix whats wrong inside and you won't need cosmetic solutions. |
This is dangerous advice |
| What is dangerous about it? |
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It all comes down to inflammation and the JAK-Stat pathway can help to mitigate that - but glucose spikes cause it. You can take a topical JAK inhibitor but they aren't currently widely available. https://www.healio.com/news/dermatology/20190619/jak-inhibitor-promotes-hair-growth-in-both-men-women-with-androgenetic-alopecia
ATI-502 (Aclaris), an investigational topical Janus kinase (JAK) 1/3 inhibitor, was evaluated in adult women and men with androgenetic alopecia (AGA) and applied to the scalp twice daily for 26 weeks. Twenty-three of 31 subjects completed 6 months of treatment. Twenty subjects, 14 men and 6 women, had evaluable hair counts, and 22 subjects recorded investigator global assessment and subject self-assessment scores. The mean change from baseline in non-vellus target area hair count (TAHC) at week 26 was the primary endpoint. The TAHC increase was 15.3 hairs/cm2 in female subjects and 5.6 hairs/cm2 in males, according to a press release from Aclaris. The investigators rated 16 of 22 subjects (73%) as experiencing increased hair growth, and 18 of 22 subjects (82%) rated themselves as experiencing increased hair growth. “By inhibiting the local inflammation, you remove that [resting phase and hair loss effect], allowing hair follicle stem cell activation, pushing that follicle back into the anagen phase,” Walker said. The effect in female subjects was particularly strong, according to Walker. A continued linear hair increase was seen up to 6 months, which is not typical in this condition, he said. Twelve-month results from this trial are expected by the end of the year. The treatment is nonhormonal, Walker said, and could be used in a variety of options, such as in monotherapy or in combination with existing therapies. “One thing that surprised me was how robust the female data was,” Walker said. “ Most people who work in hair loss studies look at males first, then go to females. We just decided to do both. I think that was a pleasant surprise.” |
I’d think the high schools you knew started showing early symptoms in middle school. They and their mom probably noticed at the very earliest stages the hairline moved. I remember people telling my husband that it seemed that he may not go bald like his older brothers. But we were already seeing the signs that wasn’t as evident from afar depending on that week’s cut or style. |
I think you’re the clueless one. I worked on the FDA approval of it. No gender issues. Joint pain is a possible side effect, but not common. I know several men who are on it for years and they still use it daily and have full hair. |
WTF? |
There are very few bald men in Hollywood. |
Did you even read the post you're replying to??? |
Because the successful ones have had hair transplants etc. |
That's called a conflict of interest. Now people really know you are a shill. |
That and many wear high dollar wigs. |