DammitLetMeIn
Experienced Member
- Reaction score
- 2
Quite simply. Is it because of cooked fats which sends 5-alpha reductase sky high?
opinions, thoughts?
opinions, thoughts?
So said:It's not that simple.
Diet can exaccerbate hair loss (like adding fuel to a fire).
Bertie said:You seem to be under the impression that DHT levels are the only thing that determines hair loss.
Absolutely false.
Equally as important, if not more so, is whether or not the hairs on the top of your head respond negatively to DHT (and other male hormones).
In some men, such as all pure blooded American Indians, scalp hair does not respond negatively to DHT. These men can have sky high levels of DHT, shoot steroids, do anything else to jack their male hormones into the stratosphere and it won't matter -- they won't go bald.
Furthermore, you continue to have this false concept of "excess DHT" or "too much DHT." In any man whose hair responds negatively to DHT, a rather wide range of DHT levels is capable of continuting the balding process. Diet and exercise can possibly reduce DHT levels in a balding man enough to slow down the process a little, but such things are unlikely to produce the drasticly low, out-of-normal-range DHT levels needed to halt or nearly halt the balding process in those men already balding. (Again, we're talking only DHT in this discussion -- I'm leaving aside the fact that diet and exercise may contribute positively at other stages in the process, as well as other drugs that address other parts of the chain.)
