The Real Cause of Hair Loss
Quote from Top Hair Loss Treatments on March 4, 2019, 3:26 pmThe currently accepted explanation for pattern hair loss is that dihydrotestosterone (DHT) binds to hair follicles and over time this causes them to shrink until they stop producing hair. However, this explanation doesn't account for the following observations:
- DHT is believed to cause hair growth everywhere else on the body (e.g. beard, chest hair, etc.)
- The area where baldness occurs corresponds perfectly to the area of the scalp known as the galea aponeurotica - an area with less blood flow compared to the rest of the scalp (see attached image below)
- Individuals with pattern baldness are more susceptible to various diseases. For example, men who were completely bald at the crown were 36% more likely to suffer a cardiac event in a large study over 11 years
- Researchers have observed that bald men's scalps have four times as many collagen bundles (scar tissue) compared to non-bald scalps
Are there any other holes in the DHT hypothesis? And can anyone come up with a theory that explains the observations above?
Better yet, do you know of treatments that could address these observations and reverse hair loss?
The currently accepted explanation for pattern hair loss is that dihydrotestosterone (DHT) binds to hair follicles and over time this causes them to shrink until they stop producing hair. However, this explanation doesn't account for the following observations:
- DHT is believed to cause hair growth everywhere else on the body (e.g. beard, chest hair, etc.)
- The area where baldness occurs corresponds perfectly to the area of the scalp known as the galea aponeurotica - an area with less blood flow compared to the rest of the scalp (see attached image below)
- Individuals with pattern baldness are more susceptible to various diseases. For example, men who were completely bald at the crown were 36% more likely to suffer a cardiac event in a large study over 11 years
- Researchers have observed that bald men's scalps have four times as many collagen bundles (scar tissue) compared to non-bald scalps
Are there any other holes in the DHT hypothesis? And can anyone come up with a theory that explains the observations above?
Better yet, do you know of treatments that could address these observations and reverse hair loss?
Uploaded files:Quote from Guest on May 22, 2020, 3:18 pmSeems more people online are realizing the role of calcification in hair loss. It's not as simple as DHT=hair loss ubt DHT is definitely involved somehow otherwise 5AR inhibitors such as finasteride and dutasteride wouldn't be so effective. The best explanation of the bulletpoints you raise here is that DHT is somehow up stream of calcification and so by lowering DHT you also lower calcification but unfortunately there are currently no drugs that could realistically target the calcification. If there was I think we would have a good shot at full regrowth.
Seems more people online are realizing the role of calcification in hair loss. It's not as simple as DHT=hair loss ubt DHT is definitely involved somehow otherwise 5AR inhibitors such as finasteride and dutasteride wouldn't be so effective. The best explanation of the bulletpoints you raise here is that DHT is somehow up stream of calcification and so by lowering DHT you also lower calcification but unfortunately there are currently no drugs that could realistically target the calcification. If there was I think we would have a good shot at full regrowth.
Quote from Guest on September 15, 2020, 3:46 amQuote from Guest on May 22, 2020, 3:18 pmSeems more people online are realizing the role of calcification in hair loss. It's not as simple as DHT=hair loss ubt DHT is definitely involved somehow otherwise 5AR inhibitors such as finasteride and dutasteride wouldn't be so effective. The best explanation of the bulletpoints you raise here is that DHT is somehow up stream of calcification and so by lowering DHT you also lower calcification but unfortunately there are currently no drugs that could realistically target the calcification. If there was I think we would have a good shot at full regrowth.
What about taurine? It says here it can reverse fibrosis https://tophairlosstreatments.com/taurine-hair-loss/
Quote from Guest on May 22, 2020, 3:18 pmSeems more people online are realizing the role of calcification in hair loss. It's not as simple as DHT=hair loss ubt DHT is definitely involved somehow otherwise 5AR inhibitors such as finasteride and dutasteride wouldn't be so effective. The best explanation of the bulletpoints you raise here is that DHT is somehow up stream of calcification and so by lowering DHT you also lower calcification but unfortunately there are currently no drugs that could realistically target the calcification. If there was I think we would have a good shot at full regrowth.
What about taurine? It says here it can reverse fibrosis https://tophairlosstreatments.com/taurine-hair-loss/