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    Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Bioenergetics Discussion
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    • H Offline
      Hearthfire @wester130
      last edited by Hearthfire

      @wester130

      I think treitinoin helps absorption, but also:

      Chat GPT says:

      Tretinoin (a retinoid) increases skin cell turnover and thins the outermost layer of the skin (stratum corneum), which can:
      Increase scalp permeability
      Allow more minoxidil to reach the follicles

      Minoxidil must be converted into minoxidil sulfate by an enzyme in the scalp called sulfotransferase.
      Some research suggests tretinoin may:
      Increase sulfotransferase activity

      Some peoples scalps don't have enough sulfotransferase, therefore treitinoin is used topically to convert it.

      Alternatively, oral minoxdil can be taken if you're a non-responder to topical, because the liver has abundant sulfotransferase enzymes.

      W 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • W Offline
        wester130 @Hearthfire
        last edited by

        "In reference to the man who fell in a fireplace and regrew his hair - you can actually get your scalp skin burned off.
        It is called a phenol peel, far stronger than an ordinary chemical peel.
        It is not sold online, you cannot buy the ingredients, only specialist beauty centers will offer it."

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        • W Offline
          wester130 @Hearthfire
          last edited by

          has anyone ever considered scar gels for hair loss?

          there is a lot of overlap with healing the skin and TGFb-1

          many of them contain interesting ingredients that would stop inflammation in the scalp

          L 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • L Offline
            LetTheRedeemed @wester130
            last edited by

            @wester130 going down the turpentine rabit hole, I googled around and found some research on terpenes supposedly reducing types 1 and 3 collagen -- bakuchiol, according to google. this also said terpenes are used for wound healing. I'm willing to believe that turpentine can straight up strip the collagenous paint out of one's scalp, lol

            part of me wants to put turpentine on my head.

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            • L Offline
              LetTheRedeemed @wester130
              last edited by

              @wester130 oh wow, ultrasound can break down fibrous tissue at the cellular level. There are clinics offering therapeutic scalp ultrasounds for hair health. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/tee.23866

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              • W Offline
                wester130 @Mauritio
                last edited by wester130

                some research i am doing on essential oils and vasodilation

                rosemary and menthol are not potent, neither is euclayptus, neither make the top 10

                patchouliguaiols ,
                citral,
                carvacrol + thymol ,
                eugenol
                are the most potent vasodilators if you are looking at isolated chemicals

                for patchouliguaiols, spikenard or simply patchouli oil would work

                for citral, lemongrass or lemon verbena

                for carvacrol + thymol , - oregano and thyme

                for eugenol - clove essential oil would work

                ginger, cinnamon, capscium, rosemary, menthol don't make the top 10 list.
                rosemary for hair is the biggest scam going, look at the science, the chemicals in rosemary do not vasdodilate,

                GastonG C MossyM 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • GastonG Offline
                  Gaston @wester130
                  last edited by

                  @wester130 More horseshit from Big Rosemary.

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                  • C Offline
                    CrumblingCookie @wester130
                    last edited by CrumblingCookie

                    Rosemary (or sage) is not about vasodilation but about powerful anti-inflammatory activity by its diterpene carnosic acid, which is an antagonist to the human VDR and thus innate immunity. It may therefore work topically (to suppress symptoms for temporary healing but not to cure) for psoriasis and the like.

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                    • H Offline
                      Hearthfire @CrumblingCookie
                      last edited by

                      @CrumblingCookie

                      It also kills bacteria and fungus and parasites (e.g. demodex mites). The vasodilation was never the main use for me.

                      And who cares if it's not the most potent vasodilator? It still produces some vasodilation. That's just a plus.

                      Anti-inflammatory + anti-bacteria/fungus/parasite + vasodilation. No way that's not going to be beneficial to your hair health/growth.

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                      • MossyM Offline
                        Mossy @wester130
                        last edited by

                        @wester130 Interesting about the strength of the oils, as far as vasodilation goes. I find oregano to be dangerously strong, so that is no surprise it's on the list. I have two versions of oregano oil, full strength and diluted to 25%. I accidentally put the full strength on my skin once, and that was interesting, to say the least. Due to that, I put a white sticker on the cap, with a large red circle, and I added red stripes down the front of the bottle. Same company, same size bottle, with the only distinction being the 25% dilution in small print, until I added these.

                        "To desire action is to desire limitation" — G. K. Chesterton
                        "The true step of health and improvement is slow." — Novalis

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                        • W Offline
                          wester130 @Mossy
                          last edited by wester130

                          @Mossy dont you dilute it yourself?? for example one drop per 50ml liquid?

                          i don't understand - you used the oil straight?

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