- Reaction score
- 42
jonson said:And tricomin have only 0.3% ahk. You need 2.5%
Depends on who you believe, I'm afraid. I tend to believe ProCyte, when they say Tricomin has 1% AHK-Cu.
jonson said:And tricomin have only 0.3% ahk. You need 2.5%
TheLastHairbender said:You two: Do NOT start that argument here.
tuesday said:(Bryan, while I understand your argument economically - and that could work, depending on some details - there is a finite amount of product that, at least for my skin/scalp - can absorb in any time period. And tricomin in particular is pretty slick stuff. I assume the silicones are why guys say it "wears" well, easy to apply, doesn't leave hair weird for the day, etc. But the formula also, at least for me, precludes applying enough over a 24 hour period to reach 2.5-5%. It simply isn't possible for my skin - pretty healthy, no irritation, not dry, not anything but normal - to accept that much tricomin to reach supposedly efficacious levels. So it is possible that, while perhaps a financial argument could be made - and there is no way I am throwing myself into this fray - there are other considerations, sometimes.)
I do not, but I recall reading that an ethanol/PG/H20 vehicle similar to that used for liquid minoxidil was expected to work well, although there were suggestions not to compound it in the same solution with minoxidil because possible interactions between the two were not well understood. I would not take action based on this advice alone, but it might help you search for more complete answers.
I'm putting mine directly in Tricomin. A 6oz bottle can be had for ~$40-45 on sale and should last 3 months at 2mL per day.
I have only been using the AHK-Cu/Tricomin mix for less than a week, so nothing to report so far, although it does feel pretty good to apply.
Adding 3g of AHK-Cu to a 6oz/180mL bottle of Tricomin will increase the concentration of AHK-Cu by 1.75%. So the total concentration will depend on the innate concentration of AHK-Cu in Tricomin - that neverending argument seems to have settled on a disagreement between .3% and ~1%. Some claim to have had it tested, revealing .3%, others claim to have heard from ProCyte directly that it is roughly 1%. I am personally not convinced that we know the answer to this, as the manufacturer has never made a publicly verifiable admission. In either case, the total concentration with a 3g addition to a full bottle of Tricomin will be between 2.05% and 2.75% if those numbers provide lower and upper bounds. To confirm, the +1.75% was calculated as: 6oz x 28.5g/oz = 171g of Tricomin, then 3g/171g = .0175, or 1.75%. If you wanted to increase the concentration by, say, 2.5% to yield an approximately 3% solution, add: 171 x .025 = 4.275g AHK-Cu.
I have only mixed a +2.2% solution myself, meaning a 2.2% increase in the concentration, by adding 1.33g to 1/3 bottle of Tricomin (60mL) that I measured out in a graduated cylinder. I executed the mixture at room temperature and can confirm that this quantity added did not result in oversaturation - and after five days maintained at room temperature I have not observed precipitation of any solids. Good luck!
Rather than just use that Korean study, I'd suggest also using the Trachy et al studies which I've posted several times on hairloss sites. They aren't as highly technical as the Korean study, but they do give some details of a larger number of copper peptides than just the one used in Tricomin. Furthermore, these studies used more than just one kind of animal with which to experiment, including humans. The human trial used what they call "PC1031", not the "PC1234" used in Tricomin. It was applied in both 2% and 10% solutions of the peptide in propylene glycol, alcohol, hydroxypropylmethylcellulose, water, and nonoxynol 9. Application of 0.25 mL was made morning and evening by each subject.
PC1234 and PC1031 were also applied topically in a separate study, but only in mice. The PC1234 (which was more effective than the PC1031) was applied in doses of 0.25%, 0.67%, and 1.25%, while the PC1031 was applied in doses of 1.0%, 2.5%, 5.0%. The PC1234 definitely had better results, even at those lower doses.
For more details about all three of these studies, obtain them from a medical library, and read them in their entirety (I've given the full citations in previous posts).