I think my SHBG is more low because of my genetics. I can't do that much about it. I didn't measure my blood levels more often though.. Will do that this year. If your SHBG is low because of insulin resistance or metabolic syndrome or something else it's way easier to fix I guess. Exercise, green tea, soy intake are some things that have shown to increase SHBG levels. I raise big question marks about how much you can influence SHBG especially if you are healthy otherwise, seems almost impossible from what I have read. If someone has input for me then that would be great.
I have always thought a good approach would be to clone a person's hair follicles, grow those under laboratory conditions, and then transplant. What are alternate approaches using regenerative/gene therapy? How far away do you think those are?
Thanks for posting your SHBG and free testosterone numbers. That was interesting to compare against my own. FYI: a better marker for free testosterone is what is known as "free and weakly bound testosterone". This uses a more accurate chemistry and includes the fraction bound to albumin, which is actually bioavailable. This type is known as "bioavailable testosterone" as well. "Free testosterone can underestimate the actual amount significantly.
Indeed you are right about the testosterone, thank you. In terms of regenerative therapy I was indeed aiming to clone hair follicles. Some exciting teams that are working on this research are;
- Takashi Tsuji (Tokyo)
- Lauster et al. (Berlin)
- Jahoda et al. (UK/USA it seems)
Regenerative therapy would be great for a "full cure" as I would like to call it. It would give the possibility to get your full head of hair back. How far do I think these technologies are? Not close enough that's for sure. Nobody worldwide is even initiating pre-clinical trials yet. As you can imagine everything takes much time so even if they would have the "eureka" moment tomorrow it would still have to go through all the clinical trials. And remember that is only if everything goes well. What if they stumble upon problems? So, yeah you get the point.. A commercial venture that gets on the market in the near future is a fantasy. Exciting research? Yes, but certainly too far away at the moment.
In terms of gene therapy I don't see that quick how that could apply to a "full cure". However in terms of a "functional cure", that means as a full on preventative treatment, it could be quite exciting yes. Remember we actually do know how to stop Androgenetic Alopecia completely. All you would have to do for example is silence the androgen receptor completely and Androgenetic Alopecia would never set in or proceed. The pathway chain would be completely broken. For someone who hasn't started balding yet or is in the early stages of balding, that would be basically everything he needs. Someone who is NW6 won't get his hair back with that. For example it could be perhaps possible to induce a AAV-shRNA (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19642108) to the scalp to silence the androgen receptor.
That would mean hypothetically that you would be immunized to Androgenetic Alopecia for a long amount of time, with no side effects at all. I could make a post about that in the future. It's quite realistic to envision something like that actually. Although I haven't read that much about it yet. Imagine the "ethical questions" gene therapy for Androgenetic Alopecia would bring though... Yeah that would be something :laugh:.
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Yeah its kind of funny the stuff James B. Hamilton did that long ago is still to this day the only proven way we know of for sure to actually stop male pattern baldness.
Swoop you use RU and finasteride then right. What do you think of the safety long term of these 5-ar inhibitors? I get a little worried it inhibits 5-ar 3 , crosses blood brain barrier, and might affect neurotransmitters. That is my biggest worry along with any possible prostate cancer effect. Mainly why I have never tried it, and my male pattern baldness is very very slow so im not in dire straights.
Your opinion I guess is use an AA right away.
abcdefg,
Yeah funny huh.. I bet that almost nobody has read these papers honestly
. It's from year 1942: "Male hormone stimulation is
prerequisite and an incitant in common baldness".
I cycle RU/finasteride now with an off period. I don't use them together that would be too harsh of a combination for me.
My opinion isn't exactly to use an AA right away. Actually anno 2016 we have sub-par treatments in my opinion and we are severely limited.
But yeah if you remember that;
- Androgenetic Alopecia seems to be extremely complex
- We have little researchers worldwide focussing on the problem, very little actually.
- No proper models (rodent model)
- Red tape that slows everything down significantly.
- No recognition for Androgenetic Alopecia
Put all those factors together and one can understand why advancements are SLOW AS HELL. Hellouser explained this in a topic recently.
I often say prevention is extremely important because Androgenetic Alopecia seems extremely hard to reverse. I think many people don't seem to grasp that. If you neglect the current options we have because you hope for a possible reversal "cure" in the near future then you are walking in the clouds. Sure a miracle may always arise, but what are the odds of that to happen? Almost non-existent. It's that simple. Instead of a reversal cure we have more chances of perhaps some sort of better maintenance treatment in the near future. That's way more likely in my opinion.
You should research the current options and weight the risk/benefit for yourself. It's really a personal decision to be honest abcdefg. Finasteride sides are definitely real, and I believe they hit more people than the clinical trials say they do. That being said we don't have much to work with really. Personally I feel that finasteride is definately worth a try. The majority of people seem to do completely fine. Although there are certainly people that can't handle the stuff. Well you can always quit.. These lingering side effects are concerning in a very small subset of people but even most of those people seem to recover eventually. Again risk/benefit man..
I wouldn't be worried at all about prostate cancer risk personally. And in regards to brain function, you will probably feel it mentally if you don't react well to finasteride. Again you could quit and in almost all cases be perfectly fine.
I get subtle but unpleasant sexual side effects on finasteride though. I seem to become a tad more sensitive to RU58841 too. Luckily for me I react very well to both treatments. My hair quality improves extremely well on both. I opt for a minimum maintenance treatment now. I need to, because unlike you I will lose my hair pretty rapidly if I'm not any treatments for a long duration of time.