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20 New posts today
37 People currently Posting »
Xandrox or normal minoxidil?
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10.31.08
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Support Chat Schedule Find out when we are having our next chat gathering. Find out when we are having our next chat gathering.Previous Chat Transcripts Get valuable information from previous in the in the hair loss chat room. the hair loss chat room.
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Beware of companies offering hair follicle bulb tests to determine cause of hair loss...
Well the news is out on these companies. Researchers at the department of health in Oakland, California sent hair samples from a healthy person to six of the nine laboratories in America which promote mineral analysis of hair as a way of diagnosing health problems. But findings from the sample varied considerably, and the laboratories gave conflicting dietary and nutritional supplement advice.
Some financial analysis of these companies revealed that consumers spend nearly $10 million a year on these tests.
The laboratories the samples were sent to perform 90% of the 225,000 hair mineral tests done annually in the US. The research, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) matched those of a 15-year-old study of hair analysis laboratories. The study found that the laboratories used varying testing methods on the samples, employed various reference points for mineral content and produced completely inconsistent results.
These tests aren't always just used to give a false sense of security, or unwarranted alarm in relation to hair loss. These companies also use the results of their tests to sometimes imply contamination in the patient's water, other environmental hazards, and to make nutritional suggestions regarding the patients diet. It is because of this that the Dept. of Health in Oakland is exposing these services as worthless, inconsistent, and unethical.
The researchers warned: "Health care choices based on these analyses may be ineffective or even detrimental to the patient's overall health." They said the results of hair analysis can be skewed by hair treatments, contamination from environmental sources and inconsistent lab techniques. They recommended that doctors should not use hair analysis to evaluate patients' exposure to environmental hazards or to assess nutritional issues. They also urged public health and consumer protection agencies to warn the public about the tests' unreliability.
Georgia public health expert Steven Steindel, and Peter Howanitz of the State University of New York, Health Science Center agreed doctors considering ordering hair analysis should wait for evidence the test works. They said health professionals who wanted to assess nutritional status or who are basing nutritional counseling or therapy on hair analysis results should reconsider their approach "unless and until the reliability of hair analysis value is established."
HLT
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