goldstone
Posts: 440
Location: , usa
Joined: 12/6/2018
|
Fight Hair Loss - Popular Methods Reviewed |
Flag »
Reply »
|
Finasteride is sold under the brand VitaKeratin Review names Propecia and Proscar. It works by inhibiting the production of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) which is a testosterone product largely responsible for male pattern baldness.
Spironolactone is marketed under various brand names like Spirocream, spironolactone, Berlactone and Aldactone, It comes in the form of a cream topically applied and behaves like an anti-androgen, binding to the androgen receptors to prevent them from binding with DHT. This action prevents hair from falling off.
This is a 21st century invention advertised to combat baldness. Marketed by a company appropriately named Androhair, the laser comb uses visible red light emanating from the comb teeth that's claimed to penetrate into blood vessels to let more blood circulation into the scalp to replenish hair follicles the nutrients they need to grow hair. It's worth a try. Then again, a simple nightly or early morning massage of your scalp works just as well.
It is often said that there's really no cure for baldness. This fact refers to androgenetic alopecia which is a pattern balding trait coming from genes that instruct certain body enzyme to overproduce testosterone androgens that weaken hair follicles to produce very fine hair or none at all. It's true that genetically caused baldness can only find lasting cure with gene therapy. But until the genetic mapping project which successfully identified the genes causing both male and female pattern baldness yields a commercial genetic therapy, most of the hair fall treatment that apply to both sexes are confined to mitigating the action of DHT and improving blood flow to nourish the follicles at the cellular level.
|
|
|
Tuesday, April 2, 2019 at 2:47:07 AM |
Atley Azel
Posts: 14
Joined: 3/31/2019
|
Re: Fight Hair Loss - Popular Methods Reviewed |
Flag »
Reply »
|
Androgenetic alopecia is a common form of hair loss in both men and women. In men, this condition is also known as male-pattern baldness. Hair is lost in a well-defined pattern, beginning above both temples. Over time, the hairline recedes to form a characteristic "M" shape. Hair also thins at the crown (near the top of the head), often progressing to partial or complete baldness. The pattern of hair loss in women differs from male-pattern baldness. In women, the hair becomes thinner all over the head, and the hairline does not recede. Androgenetic alopecia in women rarely leads to total baldness. |
|