- Reaction score
- 1,321
Interesting study here:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28475144
Anyone have any input or seen the full paper?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28475144
Anyone have any input or seen the full paper?
Interesting study here:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28475144
Anyone have any input or seen the full paper?
My big problem with extracts in general (same as Procyanidin B2) is that you are getting many many compounds in the mix.
The problem with adding 20-50 unknown compounds to a carefully formulated topical treatment is you have no idea what will happen. What if one component of the "extract" is a compound that chemically reacts with one of your primary topical ingredients?
ie. I'd love to use Procyanidin B2. But you can't get it pure. It comes as an apple/grape extract with dozens or more of other compounds in the mix.
What if one of them reacts with my darolutamide, that I'm paying hundreds of dollars a gram for and I depend on? What if it reacts with my RU58841?
To know for sure you'd have to do stability studies and from what I understand those are f*****g hard and beyond my skill.
Probably it's nothing to worry about. But who knows for sure? I don't. It's like how cetirizine degrades in alcohol. It would be easy to miss that if you don't know (I only realized because someone else figured it out and posted here), and you could waste months/years applying a dead compound to your scalp.
It's also why I think ingredient counts in topicals should be kept low where possible.
What lotions?Yep. Well, I actually Apply 4 different lotions, 3 at night ( 30 minutes away one form each other ) and at morning the cetirizine.
Could be a pain, but all for hair and to not longer use Dutasteride/ Finasteride ( 2 month without them and I love it )
1) alpha estradiol 0.025 :/:What lotions?
The plant they used is an endangered species, probably be extinct soon