Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard
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@Hearthfire it still sounds a dangerous drug
I am consdiering NMN, nicotinamide mononucleotide, seems better than niacinamide
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I did a bit more reading on the side effects, the crazy stuff like heart attacks seems it's related to people taking it in tablet form in fairly high doses, and it's because it raises your blood pressure.
I don't think rubbing the gel on topically would cause an issue, not anymore than nizoral/minoxidil and some of the other things people use topically. Since you can now buy the gel on freakin' Amazon without a prescription, I imagine it's very safe to use topically.
People take NSAIDs all the time that increase the risk of heart attack. Doesn't mean it will. If you're not healthy, by all means avoid it.
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@Hearthfire @wester130
It will be good to hear how you guys do on it. Definitely interested to know if you get any sides, with heart and stomach. Too bad that Hairlosstalk forum poster never reported back. -
@wester130 said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
I may try voltarol gel instead
Interesting. You're thinking the non-generic may be more pure, therefore less sides?
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@Hearthfire said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
I also would avoid diclo while woundling, as inflammation triggers the growthfactors which makes it even less practical as pgd2 and crth2 inhibit wound induced hf neogenesis.
If true, this is good information to have.
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@Mossy possibly less sides, also need to be aware of a strange dry cough it can cause
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@Mossy said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
After some additional research, I'm going to have to count out taking Diclofenac gel for now, based on potential severe stomach issues, such as ulcers and deterioration of the lining.
If I understand these posts correctly, some users of Diclofenac take an additional supplement or drug to counter the lining deterioration, ulcer issue. That seems like a tightrope that would be hard to walk, getting the balance just right. At least for someone highly susceptible to side effects.
https://www.reddit.com/r/ChronicPain/comments/bn7a7z/comment/en3g3zc/
Please correct me if I'm worng. I think these side effects are somewhat common when oral Diclofenac is used, but super super rare when it is applied topically? European drug regulatory agencies doesn't seem to list any such effects, only local irritation / skin-related side effects, and possible allergic reactions (asthma, swelling, very rare, less than 1 report in 10 000), nothing else. Anecdotal evidence seems to support that.
But obviously, with drug / supplement sensitivity you described, one never knows
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Yeah, I did a little reading into it, it seems to be from oral pills at moderate to high doses.
Other NSAIDs people take have similar side effects, but millions of people take them every day without issue.
I think topical is probably safe.
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@Mossy you should still take caution but this says topical is safer
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@BearWithMe said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
@Mossy said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
After some additional research, I'm going to have to count out taking Diclofenac gel for now, based on potential severe stomach issues, such as ulcers and deterioration of the lining.
If I understand these posts correctly, some users of Diclofenac take an additional supplement or drug to counter the lining deterioration, ulcer issue. That seems like a tightrope that would be hard to walk, getting the balance just right. At least for someone highly susceptible to side effects.
https://www.reddit.com/r/ChronicPain/comments/bn7a7z/comment/en3g3zc/
Please correct me if I'm worng. I think these side effects are somewhat common when oral Diclofenac is used, but super super rare when it is applied topically? European drug regulatory agencies doesn't seem to list any such effects, only local irritation / skin-related side effects, and possible allergic reactions (asthma, swelling, very rare, less than 1 report in 10 000), nothing else. Anecdotal evidence seems to support that.
But obviously, with drug / supplement sensitivity you described, one never knows
Thank you for pointing that out. I came back here to say something to that exact point, but you beat me to it. It does seem like those effects are from oral, not topical. But I can tell you that I'm about 95% sure I'll still get them from topical, albeit not as strong. I can't even use topical niacin or niacinamide without negative effects, e.g., allergic reactions: over all malaise, hypoxia-like breathing issues, . Even so, I do have some Diclofenac in my cart on Amazon! I am mulling over whether the name brand would offer a higher quality product, and therefore less sides, as @wester130 was considering.
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@wester130 said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
@Mossy you should still take caution but this says topical is safer
Indeed. Thank you for bringing that up. I would start very slowly.
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@Mossy Be careful not to cause the side effects just by expecting the side effects. Wish you the best of luck.
It is very interesting that Diclofenac is apparently effective for both hair loss and beard loss. The pathology of the two seems to be very different, almost the opposite?
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@BearWithMe said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
@Mossy Be careful not to cause the side effects just by expecting the side effects. Wish you the best of luck.
It is very interesting that Diclofenac is apparently effective for both hair loss and beard loss. The pathology of the two seems to be very different, almost the opposite?
I get that. A self-fulfilling prophecy. I am conscious of that. And thank you!
I have read many stories of people successfully using minoxidil for beard growth. So, maybe not that different after all.
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@Mossy what about GHK-cu dissolved in DMSO?
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@onliest are you referring to a zinc thymullin product?
https://infiniwell.com/products/duo-cosmetic-ghk-cu-zu-thymulin
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@wester130 No but that product is interesting. I've made a serum with ghk-cu with vegetable glycerin as a base to use on my face. I think with DMSO as a base would increase absorbability. I have plenty of hair but a few white ones, and flaky scalp, I think from fungus.
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@onliest what are you trying to achieve? regrowth?? you could dissolve 100mg of caffeine in it and it would be a perfect product
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@wester130 Maybe I'll mix some bloo in too. I don't know where to find zinc-thymulin. I think I have some measure of chronic seb derm. Bloo helps but it comes back. Probably secondary to poor scalp perfusion/low thyroid function. I'd like to blast T3 again but I get fat.
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@onliest said in Diclofenac gel to regrow hair on bald head and beard:
@Mossy what about GHK-cu dissolved in DMSO?
GHK-cu is on my very long list of things to try (again). You may have read I did try copper peptides about 15 years ago, for about a 6 month stint. I do feel that it helped with hair color and maybe even retaining hair, but there is no way for me to tell for sure. But, during that time I also declined into the worst health state of my life. I can't necessarily blame copper peptides, because my life was very stressful at that time as well. I'm more apt to blame the stress than supplements. But, ever since that health decline I've never been the same. I can't take supplements like I used to.
Purely from a cost and convenience perspective, I'm more apt to try Diclofenac than more expensive options, such as GHK-cu. If it weren't for the potential sides I would jump right in.
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Treatment of alopecia areata by topical diclofenac sodium gel in comparison to benzoyl peroxide gel. A novel single blind therapeutic clinical trial
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Patients were instructed to apply topical 1% diclofenac sodium gel twice daily for 2 months to all affected patches with gentile massage.
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Few and tolerable adverse effects were observed during the course of the treatment of both topical gels, like erythema and itching, but these was resolved spontaneously during the course of the therapy without interrupting the treatment course
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The present study has proved its effectiveness in the treatment of AA as 21 (65.9%) patches showed complete hair regrowth at the end 4 months of follow up.
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The topical multiple successful therapy lead us to speculate that all of them
work through the same mechanism by irritation of the keratinocyte of the hair follicles, and the epidermis to induce the release of immune mediators. These mediators will regulate the dysregulated immunity, hence, stimulating the arrested growth of hair bulb to regenerate again producing a normal coarse hair, this so called “irritant theory” could be applied to other skin diseases like vitiligo.