New Product: RevitaLash Hair Conditioner, very interesting!!

but What about Today

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New Product: RevitaLash Hair Conditioner, very interesting!!!


Made by Athena Cosmetics, and is fairly new. Here some links of info


RevitaLash is launching hair thickener

New Launch: Hair by Revitalash

Reviewed and Recommended: Hair by Revitalash



some info on prostaglandin analogues and hair growth that was done before revitalash for topical was released:

Prostaglandin analogs for hair growth: Great expectations Ronni Wolf MD1, Hagit Matz MD1,2, Miriam Zalish3, Ayala Pollack MD3, Edith Orion MD1 Dermatology Online Journal 9(3): 7

1. The Dermatology Unit, Kaplan Medical Center, Rechovot 2. The Department of Dermatology, Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel-Aviv 3. The Department of Ophthalmology, Kaplan Medical Center, Rechovot, Israel. wolf_r@netvision.net.il

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Abstract Latanoprost, a prostaglandin analog, has been reported to stimulate eyelash growth in patients using it in eye preparations for glaucoma and body and scalp hair growth when used topically in various animal models. Will prostaglandin analogs be the next agents used for forms of alopecia?

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Shortly after the introduction of a prostaglandin analog, latanoprost (Xalatan®), as an intraocular pressure (IOP)-lowering drug for use in patients with glaucoma and ocular hypertension, the stimulating effect of this drug on eyebrow and eyelash hair growth and pigmentation was reported in an ophthalmology journal. [1] As when minoxidil appeared, physicians, researchers, pharmaceutical companies, and hair-challenged lay people the world over built up hopes that lightning had struck again and that latanoprost's hair-growing capabilities would be useful for treatment of baldness. Perhaps a family of similar chemicals would become new, effective hair-promoting drugs. Latanoprost is familiar to ophthalmologists colleagues because of its utility for the treatment of glaucoma, but dermatologists lag behind in understanding the effects of this new class of drugs. This paper is an update on this hot topic.

Clinical and observational studies Latanoprost was first documented as a hair-growth stimulant by Johnstone in 1997. [1] Aware of this nonocular effect of the drug, he looked for evidence of hypertrichosis and pigmentation of eyelashes among 43 patients who were using unilateral topical latanoprost for glaucoma. Hypertrichosis was evaluated in the ipsilateral terminal and regional intermediate hairs of the upper and lower eyelids as well as vellus hair of the lower eyelid skin. There was a mean increase in lash length of the lower eyelid of 19.5 percent in the latanoprost-treated eye (range, 0%-36%). The two patients who had no measurable eyelash-length change exhibited an increase in the number of eyelashes. Differences in hair appearance between the latanoprost-treated eye and the nontreated control eye included increased number, length, thickness, curvature, and pigmentation.

Several additional case reports of hypertrichosis and darkening of eyelashes in patients treated with latanoprost have appeared. [2, 3, 4, 5, 6]. A representative case involved a 53-year-old woman who suffered from glaucoma and total loss of the eyelashes in both her eyes as well as diffuse scalp hair thinning after an allergic response to ibuprofen. She experienced a regrowth of all her eyelashes after 2 months of treatment with latanoprost.

Several subsequent studies that aimed to evaluate the effect of prostaglandin analogs on IOP also mention the side-effects of hypertrichosis and increased pigmentation of eyelashes. [7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14]. In one study, changes in eyelash characteristics, including length, thickness, density, and color, were recorded in as many as 57 percent of treated patients. [13]

Three recent controlled studies that were specifically designed to evaluate quantitatively the apparent eyelash-lengthening effect of latanoprost yielded contradictory results. In one of them, seventeen patients with glaucoma or ocular hypertension were treated with latanoprost in one eye. [15] The mean eyelash length for the treated eye was 5.8 mm at baseline, 6.5 mm at 2 weeks, 6.5 mm at 6 weeks, and 6.6 mm at 10 weeks. The corresponding differences for the untreated eyes were nonsignificant (5.7 mm, 5.8 mm, 5.9 mm, and 5.6 mm, respectively). The authors' conclusion was that latanoprost significantly increases eyelash length. In a modest prospective study of seven patients treated with latanoprost for a minimum of 5 months, lash length was assessed using a digital imaging technique. [16] Only one patient showed longer lashes, and there were thicker lashes in ten of the fourteen examined eyes. In the third analysis, 44 patients affected by IOP were divided into two groups, one treated with latanoprost and the other with timolol (control group).[17] Although the latanoprost-treated patients showed a slight tendency toward an increase in eyelash length (mean of 0.2 mm) at the 6-month checkup, this effect was not statistically significant; it was aesthetically evident in only 7 percent of the treated subjects.

Finally, even the most ardent supporters of the hair-growth potential of PG analogs would probably agree that the results of Johnstone's study, [18] presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology in 1998 were very unexpected and simply too good to be true. In reviewing the records and photographs of 89 glaucoma patients with hypertrichosis following unilateral treatment with topical latanoprost, he found five patients who had been treated for only a brief interval (less than 3 weeks) who showed increased number, length, thickness, and pigmentation of lashes similar to others who had undergone sustained treatment. Furthermore, these changes persisted in varying degrees for up to 14 months, the duration of the followup interval.

Experimental studies Perhaps the most relevant study on the effect of latanoprost on scalp hair growth is the one by Uno et al. who used a macaque model of androgenetic alopecia. [19] The results of this well-controlled study (8 monkeys, 4 treated and 4 serving as controls) showed that treatment with 50 mcg/ml latanoprost daily over 5 months caused minimal hair growth, whereas 500 mcg/ml daily over 3 months induced moderate-to-marked hair regrowth. A 5-10 percent rate of conversion of vellus hairs to intermediary or terminal hairs was observed. The vehicle group showed no effect. Stjernschantz found a significant hypertrichotic effect of a selective prostanoid receptor agonist (fluprostenol) on hair growth as determined by measuring the rate of the regrowth of fur in adult male CBA-J mice.[20]

Speculating that activation of prostaglandin-H synthase (PGHS)-1 might be the mechanism by which minoxidil stimulates hair growth in vivo, Michelet et al. demonstrated that minoxidil is indeed a potent activator of purified PGHS-1, by assaying oxygen consumption and prostaglandin (PG)E2 production.[21] This activation was also evidenced by increased PGE2 production by BALB/c 3T3 fibroblasts and by human dermal papilla fibroblasts in culture. These findings suggest that the mechanism behind the hair-growth-stimulating effect of minoxidil is stimulation of PGE2 synthesis. If this conclusion were the case, it would stand to reason that other, more specific, PG activators (PG analogs) might show even better results.

Several studies performed before the introduction of prostaglandin analogs for the treatment of IOP showed that both systemic and topical application of PGE2 resulted in a significant degree of protection against radiation-, [22, 23, 24] or doxorubicin-induced [23] alopecia.

In a more recent study, prostaglandin receptor (EP)3 and EP4 mRNA were expressed in the dermal papilla cells and the outer-root-sheath cells located in the hair bulb region, respectively, in 3-week-old mouse dorsal skin (in the anagen phase). [25] In 8-week hair follicles (in the telogen phase), the signals for both EP3 and EP4 mRNA had disappeared. On days 8 and 12 after depilation, EP3 and EP4 mRNA were reexpressed, and induction of cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 mRNA was also observed, suggesting that PG receptors are involved in the development and regrowth of the hair follicles. [25]

Two studies [26, 27] using transgenic mice with overexpression of COX-2 in the skin showed directly contradictory results. Transgenic mice under the control of a bovine keratin 5 (K5) promoter[26] and human keratin 14 promoter[27] and overexpressing COX-2 in both the basal cells of the interfollicular epidermis and the pilosebaceous unit, exhibited reduced hair-follicle density and delayed postnatal hair follicle morphogenesis compared with wild-type animals. Administration of a specific COX-2 inhibitor (in one experiment [27]) restored hair growth, indicating that the alopecia was attributable to elevated COX-2 enzymatic activity.

Our prediction for the future Although "it's tough to make predictions, especially about the future" (Yogi Berra of baseball fame), and although physicians and scientists find it hazardous to peer into a crystal ball, we are game to accept the challenge.

Even though scalp hair follicles and eyelash follicles are not identical, and one cannot simply extrapolate from a drug's effect on one type of hair to another, we believe that a powerful hair stimulant that acts on one type of hair should act on other types as well. Several of the above-mentioned experimental studies support the stimulating effects of PG analogs on hairs other than eyelashes (i.e., scalp hair and body fur). Furthermore, if the proposed mechanism of minoxidil action is indeed through its stimulating effect of PGE2 synthesis, then one should ask why we need to stimulate the synthesis of PG if we can use it directly? Minoxidil (which has been used by women to thicken their eyelashes and to treat alopecia areata of this area) showed inferior results on eyelash growth than those described for latanoprost. Minoxidil and finasteride must be used continuously to sustain results, and, once discontinued, the natural balding process resumes. PG analogs have a much more powerful and longer-lasting effect.[18]

Although we do not think that PG analogs are likely to emerge as the panacea for androgenetic alopecia, we strongly believe that they are excellent candidates to become the first drugs of choice for this affliction by achieving greater therapeutic success than other currently available preparations. Because it is highly unlikely that dermatologists encounter the effect of eyedrops on eyelash growth, and because most of the relevant literature appears in ophthalmological journals, most dermatologists know all too little about the promising effects of these new drugs. We hope that this attempt to enlighten our colleagues about these findings stimulates new lines of investigation that will reliably stimulate new and lasting hair growth.




I'm interested in its hair thickening capabilities. It is expensive but I'm sure you can find it cheaper and if it is a great hair thickener maybe even the best hair thickener then the price maybe worth it. What do you think?
 

Swanson

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This is very cool....

however a little bit expensive... would like to see more reviews on scalp hair...

but who knows... its opening more doors to help in male pattern baldness
 

but What about Today

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Here is another little study from Investigative Dermatology


"Bimatoprost, a prostaglandin analog (PGF2?) for open-angle glaucoma, may have future use to treat androgenetic alopecia MN Nguyen,1 C Chiang,2 TR Hata1 and AR Shirazi1 1 Dermatology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA and 2 Dermatology, UCSF, San Francisco, CA

Androgenetic alopecia is a very distressing condition in patients which cause significant emotional turmoil and low self-esteem. Bimatoprost ophthalmic solution 0.03%, a prostaglandin analog (PGF2?), is an effective and widely used medication in the treatment of open-angle glaucoma (Lumigan®) and has recently been FDA approved for lash lengthening and thickening (Latisse®). This single-center, 12 month proof of concept trial is the first human study to determine whether
bimatoprost causes a pharmacological effect in stimulating hair growth, density, and thickening.

This was a single-blinded, placebo controlled study of 21 subjects (13 men, 7 women) with androgenetic alopecia. Subjects were randomly assigned into three groups: placebo (vehicle alone), low dose therapy (0.2cc applied twice daily), and high dose therapy (0.4cc applied twice daily). Hair density was calculated using Mirror Imaging Software© from Canfield Scientifictm. At the 12 month endpoint, the high dose group showed a nonsignificant (p=.15) increase in hair density of 18.5%.
The low dose group demonstrated a significant (p=.02) increase of 18.8%. Of note, the placebo group showed a nonsignificant (p=.86) increase of only 1.1%. Subjects reported subjective hair thickness and length on a 7 point scale; There was no significant change in subjective scoring at 12 months. This proof of concept trial suggests that further research is warranted for bimatoprost as a possible new treatment for androgenetic alopecia."
 

but What about Today

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Here is a article from truthinageing showing that theres not much of a difference in eyelash and hair on head. http://www.truthinaging.com/2009/02/what-is-it-how-hair-eyelash-and-eyebrow-growth-works.html

and here is some results on growth eyelashes

revitalashbeforeandafte.jpg


revitalashbeforeandaftea.jpg


revitalashbeforeandafte.jpg


Offcourse there is more picture of results on eyelashes but I didn't feel like posting them.
 

but What about Today

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'And here is the results on the head from the company for RevitaLash Hair Conditioner

hairas.jpg


hairbefores.jpg


hairafterm.jpg



Its funny in the second set of the same lady the scalp/hair is obviously photoshop to look fuller which is silly since it already looked good from the sopposdly original picture.
 

but What about Today

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Here is some more pictures but from another person trying the product.


Before using Hair by RevitaLash
haira1.jpg
After 4 weeks using Hair by Revitalash
haira2.jpg



Here is here profile page Julie A
 

Nuli

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^looks a little better imo. How much per bottle are they asking? and how much is in it?
 

decro435

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Looks like it do a good job on the eyelashes. Unfortuently, I can imagine it is easy to cut someone eyelashes and take before and after pictures with a hint of mascara.

As for the hair, the pictures aren't consistent. If you really had a worthy product why wouldn't they prove it by showing identical pictures including angles, lighting and same length hair. All you have to do is look at the format of the "Before and After" pictures to know if a product is trustworthy or not. Unfortuenatly, this one does not qualify. Don't waste your money.
 

but What about Today

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hairbo.jpg


Here is a picture off the website that looks formatted better, that statement that you said makes me believe you didn't read any of the links or post that were posted. .

The look of that one girl I posted earlier looks noticeably thicker and she is just a regular person using it and there is tons of people that arent affiliated with the company who vouch that it worked on their hair.
I also posted a link on a study showing eyelash hair is not really different then eyebrow or hair on head growth.
You cant deny the science from it, its proven to work on hair. No matter what you say there is strong evidence that the chemical used in it works. Go back and read the medical reports. There is probably just as much proof that Prostaglandin works on epidermis to grow hair as there is ru58441 and a&g
On how well it works is anyone's guess as of right now since it just became available for use on your head.
 

BoilerRoom

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This all looks very interesting. I recently quit Propecia and have been trying to assemble the ultimate topical/supplement routine. I may give this one a go. Since the results appeared so quickly, I get the feeling that you probably would not need to use it everyday.

By the way, I'm loving this "Experimental Treatments" section. After reading up on here, I jumped on topical procyanidin and oral capsaicin/soy and have been getting decent results.
 

helpwithhair

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Hi everyone

has anyone ever used this? It seems good.

How long would a bottle of this stuff last, its quite expensive isnt it!
 

Swanson

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I really hope this product is more then just a cosmetic thickening foam...and actually has regrowth properties
 

squeegee

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Probably going to buy some on Vitacost. Good find!
 

squeegee

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After cleansing hair with shampoo, release a small amount of foam on the palm of your hand and work the foam evenly through the hair where needed. Do not rinse hair. Let hair dry and brush or comb as desired. For more detail, see inside information sheet.

It is a foam that stay in your hair after. No rinse.

How long can you go with a bottle? http://www.vitacost.com/RevitaLash-Hair-By-Revitalash

Expensive!
 

chore boy

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Hmmm... fat kid doin' a little math, here:

In the macque study, 500 mcg/ml produced the best results. 5 mg = 5000 mcg. So I guess someone would need .5 mg/ml in order to replicate said solution.

Anyone know how to convert a 0.03% solution into mcg/ml?
 
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