Scalp Fibrosis - Is THIS the Real Reason for Hair Loss in Men?
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- Опубліковано 23 лис 2024
- Stop Fibrosis - www.hairguard....
Is fibrosis in the scalp the real cause of hair loss in men?
In this video we dive in to find out the hidden cause of male pattern baldness.
DHT + Scalp tension = Scalp Fibrosis = Reduced blood supply and growth space of hair bulb = Hair Follicle Miniturization = MALE PATTERN BALDNESS
@@ziadelghazi6767 Next question is: Why are these muscles chronically tight? And why do some men who appear to have chronically tight muscles in the scalp still have lots of hair?
There's a lot more going on and minimal research being done. It's a shame. If someone were to really find out all the causes and the fix, they would become fantastically wealthy.
Come on, guys! Whether it's DHT, skull bone expansion, scalp tightness, or fibrosis, it all ultimately comes down to blood supply. Botox around the galea in a U-shape, with 6-7 injections, cures baldness. Botox is already used around the temples, neck, and skin for pain relief and cosmetic purposes, and it is completely safe for the scalp. This administration is similar to PRP injections, done just twice a year. There are new clinics offering this treatment with positive results, and clinical studies are available. Some clinicians are even using it alongside hair transplants to achieve accelerated results. Enjoy!
@@arunenglish3997 I asked around to see if I could get scalp Botox. I couldn't find anyone to do it.
@@bigwombat7286low magnesium and potassium. Most people are deficient.
Sounds o damn true
You quoted all sorts of clinical studies until it came to the Growband, which you seem to be selling. Where is the clinical evidence?
That's because he is. Just do manual massage with your hands. It works
Manual massages are a great option. Free and side effects free.
I understand and we are working to put together a larger scale study on the Growband. Im sure you can understand that's a large and very costly endeavour for a reasonably small company like us.
@@Hairguardplease lower the prices so more people can buy it
Botox is the holy grail for male baldness.. Just the next step from hand massage...
Whether it's DHT, skull bone expansion, scalp tightness, or fibrosis, it all ultimately comes down to blood supply. Botox around the galea in a U-shape, with 6-7 injections, cures baldness. Botox is already used around the temples, neck, and skin for pain relief and cosmetic purposes, and it is completely safe for the scalp. This administration is similar to PRP injections, done just twice a year. There are new clinics offering this treatment with positive results, and clinical studies are available. Some clinicians are even using it alongside hair transplants to achieve accelerated results. Enjoy!"
If fibrosis is the issue I’d be very curious to see a study of the effects of serrapeptase and natokinase for hair lose.
I heard good things about these specifically for fibrosis
I think cupping therapy is also very effective to increase BLOOD FLOW in scalp😊
Causes trauma to hair follicles
@@ronaknanda6175 what is the proof 🧾
@@ronaknanda6175 where is the study proof‼️
Scalp tension = higher levels of dht = more follicle miniaturization
Botox works for mpb... Fixes scalp tightness .... Read new clinical trials extremely safe..
If DHT really was the only reason why men experience hair loss, then finasteride would the number one miracle drug, which obviously is not the case. I've been doing handstands and head massages well over 6 years now and I never feel intense blood rush to my head anymore when I do handstands simply because blood is already circulating a lot more now. Also my scalp does not feel glued to my skin any more and it moves around very flexible. To top that with finasteride and cleaning up my diet I can safely say that I will have my hair for the rest of my life.
Love that.
How long do u do the handstands and massages for?
@@FrenchViking466 I gradually moved up to 1:30 min handstand and then immediately massage my entire top scalp as well as the sides to 'distribute' the rushed blood flow for like another minute. I do this twice a day, once when i wake up and once before bed. I can't tell you exactly how i massage so just find some youtube video that displays this and see what youre comfortable with.
I really appreciate your time making a concise clip of the matter. Could you kindly delve into Stem cell therapy for males pattern balding?
Yes we can make a video on that
@@Hairguard I sincerely appreciate it 🙏.
@@Hairguard There's clinic in Thailand and the US offering Stem cell therapy, it's still early stage but the results are very promising. It would be great if you guys could dive in the topic
Video quality is getting better 🔥
Thank you Sir.
OMG I learned soo much, I observed from past year I started sweating on forehead soo much, which was only a recent thing. I always thought to keep it in a relaxed it's not possible for me. Thanks for the video. As a 23yr old The recent hair loss is hurting my confidence soo much. I've been researching soo much on the internet & thanks for the video. subbed to the channel
Hey there, thanks.
It definitely hurts our confidence, especially as a young person. If you have aggressive hair loss at a young age you might really need the help of a DHT blocker. Make sure you talk to your doctor about it. Massages etc are great but if you have hair loss at a young age DHT blockers are often needed.
I think scalp exercise will do the same. It will improve blood flow oxygen supply and reduce tension
Is taking collagen peptides and gelatin recommended, or should it be avoided?
What sucks is it only affects the head. Hair starts growing in ears , nose
I'm surprised spironolactone wasn't listed on that chart of treatments that regrow new hair.
I have heard that Inversion table could help to regrow hair, by forcing blood to the head ! Anyone knows about this ?
I’ve tried just about every treatment there is except having a hair transplant and PRP. I had taken Finasteride as well but was getting quite bad side effects. Is there any way around this?
One thing I’ve noticed I get is a LOT of tension in my head. I’m convinced I’m not getting enough blood & oxygen around the areas. If I can’t go back on to Finasteride, what do you recommend? I’ve checked the website for the GrowPro and left my email to be notified when back in stock. It says a few weeks. I don’t particularly want to start doing handstands at my age like I saw in another comment
I’m almost leaning toward accepting baldness in the future as my hairs fall out quicker, but am considering one last attempt to save what’s left and see a little regrowth.
Appreciate your help. And great vid btw.
What's your age and how aggressive is your hair loss?
Does your hair loss follow the typical pattern found in MBP.
The first step is getting properly diagnosed.
Microdosing finasteride is an option that works well for many men, to get less side effects.
if you think you have a lot of tension I'd start massaging hard into the perimeter scalp muscles to reduce some of that tension. The Growband is also a great option, because it makes it easy to keep up with the massages long term.
@@Hairguard thanks for your reply.
I’m 38 and have been going through the process of typical MBP from about 31. In the last 2 years it has speeded up though. I sense it’s to do with a lot more sitting down studying. My posture has changed a little and am more hunchback so try to correct myself more. I wonder if it’s affecting oxygen & blood circulation?
I’m not too keen on going back on finasteride, I just do not trust what substances are used knowing that’s being internally consumed. Topical products are slightly different. I don’t fancy getting regimented into daily scalp massages (I’m too lazy).. this is where I wonder about the GrowPro….i could be at my desk studying having my head massaged at the same time lol!
Is it that good?
@@Hairguard when will a new batch of these GrowBand Pros be available bud? I’m over in the uk fyi
Done my microneedling today 😊
for me tomorrow
don't forget your scalp massage 😎
Mee too
How often do you do it?
@@KulwantSingh-xr4si .5mm every three to five days, 1mm every seven to nine days
@@siliconknights which scalp massages to follow?
Very worthy video.. I done 2 HT and my hair is thinning as u said..
This happens more than people think. Are you taking finasteride?
Very interesting, thank you!
Thanks.
entonces segun tu tabla de cabello por cm2 el sistema microneedling ofrece 35 cabellos por cm2? .......muy por arriba del minoxidil?..... muy interesante, porque el minoxidil me esta causando efectos secundarios y estoy buscando alternativas naturales........ habra que comprobarlo, saludos desde mx
El vídeo es basura, el Minoxidil si te causa efectos secundarios, continua hasta que se quiten, si paso mucho tiempo sin quitarse, baja la dosis. Utiliza FInasterida o Dutasterida siempre es lo más importante
The Serrappeptase feeds on fibrosis, dissolves it. Find a way to get it through bloodflow into the scalp, by forced circulation, and you got yourself a possible solution to scalp fibrosis. Maybe.
Or - get a topical serrapeptase solution.
Is there a topical serratiopeptidase solutions? Can you name some?
@@abc_cba from what I read after my comment, it is development.
@@Druze_Tito wich serrappeptase topic solution ?
@@abc_cba No, from what I read after my comment which was just a blitz idea at the moment, it is still in development.
It's never in stock, the amount of times I've put my email in.
Which country are you from? Some countries we dont ship to.
i dont get it....injuries are filled by collagen and hence hairloss but scalp massage and microneedling damage hair and thus increase the collagen in that area....then why?
Scalp massages and microneedling help to remodel the fibrotic scalp tissue. The fibrosis is like scar tissue. Its irregular and tough collagen deposit. Massage and micro needling help stimulate the tissue to renew itself.
@@Hairguard I've heard this before, but how do we know that? Any research?
@@macmos1the same way that micro needling get rid of acne scars. It brakes them down and re-organises. So guess it works the same for the scalp + gives better blood flow.
For the Botox it’s only expensive in the US in uk and the rest of the world it’s £250 ish and you only need to do it 1 time a year as Botox last 6-12 month
or can we meditate and relax of scalp. advanced meditation can actually relax your specific body parts greatly. wht do you sugguest?
Stress can definitely be connected to speeding up hair loss
Hey mate, I wish you had published this video 10 years ago. My quest started in 2013 when NOBODY seem to know ANYTHING about this topic. I went a complete NW6 at the age of 24 after starting to lose hair at 18. Fibrosis showed up right before reaching the full baldness status. I saw 7 dermatologists and quite a few Hair Transplant surgeons and NOBODY could ever tell me anything like you said. It was all about LICHEN PLANOPILARIS, then NO IT'S DERMATITIS....NO you're just sensitive on the scalp....nobody knew ANYTHING! and to be honest I found it quite frustrating and disappointing. My case is described exactly in your content here in this video! I got my first HT FUT in 2016 at the age of 28 (now i'm 36). First two years results were good, then the transplanted hair started to thin. Although it's not clear why because even the area were they extracted the strip got thin (permanent shock loss? Maybe...considering how traumatic it was), it makes sense to think the recipient area had a high influence on this. Right now it's thin...but after 2021 it seems it has stabilized. The plan now is to do FAT INJECTIONS into the scalp to restore the recipient area and reduce the fibrosis to a certain degree to prepare the scalp for a second hair transplant. This must be done before my second and third transplant (which by the way will imply thinning out the donor area to a level I will need to micropigment it). My disappointment to all the experts who examined my case is so high that some people don't even understand how I can continue this journey. THANKS FOR SHARING THIS CONTENT and I hope it will help many people like me.
Hi Simon, thanks for you comment and sorry to hear your couldn't find the right help. Hopefully you've found the info you need now and can get a decent head of hair.
Transplanted hairs will definitely thin out, it just takes time, especially if you're not on finasteride.
Definitely the key is also treating it as early as possible.
Thanks for sharing your story and I wish you luck going forward. I'd like to know more about these fat injections, perhaps we could make a video about that so more people can learn about it, as a treatment.
Wish you the best
@@Hairguard thank you for your response. Though I believe that if the loss is fast and extreme in a guy in his early 20s, Finasteride won't help much. I guess it works well on mild to moderate degrees of hair loss. I'll keep you posted on the fat injection (my own fat). As for medication, I'm on topical Finasteride+Minoxidil to give it some help. 👌
@@simonepietrofelicein your case you needed oral dutasteride as soon as possible but it might work even now.Minoxidil and microneedling and/or tretinoin before minoxidil will help restore and keep some ground as well
@@pepekont3736 mate thanks for your advice but there's no way on planet earth I'm taking oral Dutasteride which isn't even FDA approved for hair loss. The very common pattern I notice in the hair loss community is the hope and belief that a medical treatment has the power of changing one's genetics. There's medical evidence that oral Finasteride and Dutasteride are very effective medication to fight AGA, but at the end of the day it, the treatment outcome really depends on how aggressive AGA is. I am still waiting for evidece of a man who is generically destined to go complete NW6 or NW7 in his 20s taking the Finasteride or Dutasteride and keeping his hair till his 50s. Come on. I am a fan of scientific data but let's try to look at it with a bit of good sense without idolising data for the sake of keeping one's hopes high up.
funny you say fibrosis is often caused by scar tissue , but micro needling helps in hair regrwoth and it often causes scar tissue
It's not that fibrosis is caused by scar tissue. It's that they are similar. Look at a scar and see how it's shiny, and then look at a severely banded scalp. Microneedling can help remodel the fibrotic tissue and increase vascularisation.
Micro-needling does cause scarring in the traditional sense.
Seems that scalp massage would help to solve this as well, and it's free :)
Yes
Yes, scalp massage is the most affordable option to loosen and remodel scalp tissue. Another recent development with clinical trials is Botox injected in a U-shape around the galea muscle, which, just once or twice a year, loosens the scalp and addresses baldness. New positive clinical trials are out, showing that it's also the cheapest and safest method, since Botox is already safely injected in the face and head for cosmetic and neurological issues. We are so lucky to witness this breakthrough.
Botox injections are only a few £100 in the uk. Botox to the face is £125-£150 you just need to find someone trained for head that’s why it’s more like £250 and you only need to do it 1-2 times a year
Hey, yes it can be cheaper. The problem is you'll need more units than is required for aesthetic treatments like facial wrinkles. If I remember correctly its around 100 units into the scalp perimeter muscles.
@@Hairguard no I’m saying it’s £250 for scalp hair loss Botox in the uk and Europe. The most expensive iv seen is 400 in central London
It’s just significantly cheaper outside of the US. For example PRP for the face costs $1,000-$2,000 per session but in central London only costs £190
@@connorhunter9394 But is it effective?? If that was the case it would be popular right ?
@@ronaknanda6175 yes it very effective but where is the money to be made 😂 take fin and minox every day to you die or get this done every year 1-2 times
@@ronaknanda6175 also the studies all show it works and there are full meta analysis. But very few places do it only 4 places in the uk you have to get new training for it
Visible symptoms of emotional or hormonal stress in men with male pattern hair loss include an expanded skull shape, resembling an inflated circle from a top view rather than a long head. The outer layer of the skull expands, putting pressure on the blood vessel network above, which cuts down blood flow and shrinks follicles in the crown and frontal areas.
Recent clinical studies have shown that Botox injections into the scalp, particularly around the galea muscle, help address this issue, similar to how PRP injections are administered. However, PRP is not effective in this case. Many believe that the tightness of the scalp is due to this pericranial expansion. The latest developments in using Botox on the scalp have shown promising results, reducing scalp tension and even improving the success of hair transplant outcomes.
Yes btx helps by relaxing the scalp perimeter muscles to relax. The studies have been repeated over and over again with very positive results. The only downside is the large expense.
It's all about fibrosis....
Hair transplants proved it's dht
Transplanted hair will eventually miniaturize without finasteride or minoxidil, while the donor regions remain the same. Also nobody is saying that DHT isn't very important..
Absolutely. Nailed it. Hair transplants thin (if the patient doesn't block their dht).
Hairs all over the head are exactly the same.
If Minoxidil works as a vasodilator, does it stand to reason that cutting out the consumption of caffeine (a vasoconstrictor) would aid hair growth?
Absolutely, i had seasons where i stopped drinking coffee with my hair notably growing strong. As soon as i star drinking coffee my hair thins out in 1 or 2 days
@@lelong8521 Interestingly, this is something this channel doesn't believe to be true.
That's crazy! *sips my 5th cup of coffee*
@@nunyabiznes33 Even though I think it causes balding I'm writing this was a Costa Cappuccino in hand.
no, it is not
Are you going to elaborate?
No, I thought not.
Why is it men would have tight acalp more than women. That makes no sense
Tightness is the same, but due to DHT which still cogs the folicules, men will lose their hair. Women don't have that much DHT. Look. DHT is a big part of hair loss. The only thing that science got wrong until now is that the DHT is not the only cause. It is multiple things at once happening that makes us lose hair.
Yes, women have much lower levels of DHT. Remember it's the combination of DHT + chronic inflammation (from scalp tension) that leads to fibrosis. When leads to reduced blood flow and reduced growth space around the dermal papila. That leads to hair follicle miniaturisation.
@@Hairguard scalp tightness likely not inflammation . Just less blood flow so less growth factors and oxygen
@@Hairguard btw I am very convinced of this theory. My scalp is difficult to pinch exactly where one would expect. The crown and front with a bit looser in the fringes in between
Cause you caught them dht is the main reason of mpb let the snake oil salesmen protray it like a secondary reason all they want.And dht blockers not only bring back a lot of hair but also keep it way more than what this video tried to distort this fact.Add minoxidil which through potassium channels helps supress negative growth factors and you can regrow even more. Ye sorry to burst the bubble that minoxidil works with vasodilation its not..truth must prevail
I knew it
Why are women not affected?
.... because they have much lower levels of DHT
Yes
Men's bones have more thickness and are more sensitive to DHT. Post-pubertal bone growth is influenced by DHT. The pericranium (outer layer of the skull bone), along with the parietal and frontal bones, expands and puts pressure on the blood vessels from underneath, causing tightness in the galea muscle. Fibrosis starts due to tissue injury, leading to calcification. Finasteride reverses this process because bone is malleable (similar to how braces work on teeth). Minoxidil dilates blood vessels, while Botox loosens the scalp muscles, circumventing the problem and addressing the issue.
@@MrArunCochin Additionally, women ARE affected, just to a much lower degree than men. 80% of women will eventually suffer from noticeable androgenic alopecia, but the typical female pattern is diffuse thinning rather than the typical male's horseshoe pattern. One theory explaining why the difference in patterns is that difference in skull shapes between men and women.
@@MrArunCochinbut what’s the root cause?
No.
Again, no one can put forward a valid argument.
You will forsure lose your hair if you don't go on Min, Fin or both, the rest has barely any impact, that's just the truth.
What about the people who've used daily manual massages to achieve impressive hair regrowth without any medications? What are you basing this sentence on?
Nobody is saying that you shouldn't use them
It depends on how aggressive your hair loss is. Many people can stabilise hair loss without those. But if you have aggressive hair loss or hair loss at a young age, then yes.
Not so much minoxidil, but you do need to deal with the DHT. Stacking treatments will definitely help.
@@hewhodoes8073noone has regrew hair with any method other than finasteride/ dutasteride,and minoxidil.There are no real life examples of what you tell and the few on the internet are just fake and most dont have any improvement at all
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