jimmystanley
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I am interested in the studies done on the effects of anti androgens against hirsutism. I'm currently using fluridil and keep my sanity by learning as much as i can.
Okay, how is spironolactone going to be effective for hairloss when the cream version actually made the hirsutism worse? :?Bryan said:Here's an interesting little study by Rittmaster in which he tested topical spironolactone for hirsutism, and found that a cream vehicle worked better than an alcoholic solution:
http://www.geocities.com/bryan50001/spironolactone.txt
Bryan
Dice_Has_Hair said:Never mind. The "cream vehicle" is what actually made it worse. That must be the placebo they were using. I read it wrong sorry. :lol:![]()
What type of cream was it? Dermovan? I sure as hell hope its not the same cream that Dr. Lee uses for his 5% spironolactone!!! I am really thinking about giving fluridil a go!! There have been quite a few people post some really good success with it. Compared to spironolactone................it sounds a bit more effective. I just wish that the company that makes fluridil could come up with a different vehicle other than alcohol!!Bryan said:Dice_Has_Hair said:Never mind. The "cream vehicle" is what actually made it worse. That must be the placebo they were using. I read it wrong sorry. :lol:![]()
Yes, that would appear to be the best of both worlds, if you're using topical spironolactone for male pattern baldness in that same cream vehicle that they used in the study: the proven antiandrogenic effect of the spironolactone, combined with the apparent growth-stimulating effect of the cream!![]()
Sure, fluridil could CERTAINLY be tested in exactly the same way. I wish to god somebody would do it!
Bryan
Dice_Has_Hair said:What type of cream was it? Dermovan?
Dice_Has_Hair said:I sure as hell hope its not the same cream that Dr. Lee uses for his 5% spironolactone!!!
Bryan said:Well, there you have it! The cream version seemed
to perform better. In fact, the alcoholic version may
not have performed AT ALL! :-( What's interesting
is that they used a spironolactone concentration in both vehicles
of only 1%; and what's very strange is the fact that the
cream vehicle made the hirsutism WORSE. That's food
for thought.
Bryan
Cornholio said:I dont find this study encouraging at all regarding the effects of spironolactone... The second part of the study with etoh base (closest to the 1% spironolactone/etoh from dr lee that I'm using) showed little effect in hirsuit women...
Cornholio said:Here is another study using 2% spironolactone in aqueous cream, which did not show efficacy... http://www.ijem.org/iranian/9/4.html
Cornholio said:Finally, You have dr. Lee's word and experience saying that spironolactone resulted in additive benifit when taken with minoxidil or xanadrox (no numbers or data, and yes, he sells it so he COULD be biased....)
Cornholio said:Overall I think the best you can say is that spironolactone has some anti-androgen properties but hasnt been well studied in male pattern baldness (beyond dr lee's experience) to document an actual benefit in regrowth...
Cornholio said:A FOREARM/ OCCLUDED fluradil study, small numbers showing slight increase of proportion of hairs in anagen phase...
Cornholio said:Not really a study of scalp hair (I can't find a study of scalp hair)
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/ ... _110220362
http://dreampharm.com/hair-growth/hair- ... 76_96.html
S Foote. said:Let me enlighten you Bryan
Topical spironolactone has been shown to do what it was designed to do, that is effect the local androgen receptors.
Quote:
"Berardesca, E., P. Gabba, et al. (1988). "Topical spironolactone inhibits dihydrotestosterone receptors in human sebaceous glands: an autoradiographic study in subjects with acne vulgaris." International Journal of Tissue Reactions 10(2): 115-9.
There is no reason from this study, why spironolactone should not have the same effect upon the `local' androgen receptors in hair follicles!! :wink:
So the only conclusion we can reach from the failure of spironolactone in this hirstutism study, is that the androgen receptors in follicles `don't matter' in hair growth, and the receptors that `DO' matter are deeper and out of the reach of spironolactone![]()
This is yet another study result that the current theory you support just can't answer Bryan. 8)
S Foote. said:From the study quoted by Bryan:
"These results were encouraging but certainly preliminary.
One disturbing feature was that the hirsutism became worse
during the 3 months when the cream base was used."
S Foote. said:Let me enlighten you Bryan
Topical spironolactone has been shown to do what it was designed to do, that is effect the local androgen receptors.
http://www.hairlosshelp.com/forums/mess ... adid=50633
Quote:
"Berardesca, E., P. Gabba, et al. (1988). "Topical spironolactone inhibits dihydrotestosterone receptors in human sebaceous glands: an autoradiographic study in subjects with acne vulgaris." International Journal of Tissue Reactions 10(2): 115-9.
Bryan said:Again, several others besides Dr. Lee have used and tested topical spironolactone, for both male pattern baldness and hirsutism. And don't forget the published Italian study of topical spironolactone for male pattern baldness! :wink:
Bryan said:S Foote. said:Let me enlighten you Bryan
Topical spironolactone has been shown to do what it was designed to do, that is effect the local androgen receptors.
Quote:
"Berardesca, E., P. Gabba, et al. (1988). "Topical spironolactone inhibits dihydrotestosterone receptors in human sebaceous glands: an autoradiographic study in subjects with acne vulgaris." International Journal of Tissue Reactions 10(2): 115-9.
There is no reason from this study, why spironolactone should not have the same effect upon the `local' androgen receptors in hair follicles!! :wink:
So the only conclusion we can reach from the failure of spironolactone in this hirstutism study, is that the androgen receptors in follicles `don't matter' in hair growth, and the receptors that `DO' matter are deeper and out of the reach of spironolactone![]()
This is yet another study result that the current theory you support just can't answer Bryan. 8)
Jesus Christ, can you even READ, Stephen?? There wasn't a "failure" of spironolactone in the hirsutism study, except with the ineffective alcoholic vehicle. It WORKED, when applied in the cream vehicle.
I predicted in that other thread that you would get busy and try to think-up some kooky explanation for the successful topical spironolactone experiment that would be compatible with your eccentric theory. But you gotta do a LOT better than just acknowledge the one failed result, and ignore the POSITIVE one! :wink:
Like I said before, this is yet another nail in the coffin for your theory.
Bryan
Dave001 said:S Foote. said:From the study quoted by Bryan:
"These results were encouraging but certainly preliminary.
One disturbing feature was that the hirsutism became worse
during the 3 months when the cream base was used."
Yes, but what is disturbing to those with hirsutism is encouraging to us. That is because the vehicles have a mild hypertrichotic effect (via non androgen-mediated pathways).
http://www.hairlosshelp.com/forums/mess ... adid=50633[/url]
Quote:
"Berardesca, E., P. Gabba, et al. (1988). "Topical spironolactone inhibits dihydrotestosterone receptors in human sebaceous glands: an autoradiographic study in subjects with acne vulgaris." International Journal of Tissue Reactions 10(2): 115-9.
Gee, I didn't expect to see you quoting me.... Who would've thunk?[/quote:eff6d]
Hey Dave.
Are you ready to tells us all how Ockhams razor refutes my theory?????
Or do you still need more time? :wink:
S Foote.
S Foote. said:The current theory you support says that it is the androgen receptors in the follicles, that are important in both DHT related hair loss and hair growth. So topical spironolactone should effectively stop this hisutism dead!
Enough of the poor penetration excuse here. Both vehicles have enough research behind them for us to know the medication would at least be getting into the follicle cells, where you claim it matters!!
What should be obvious in these topical spironolactone tests, is that if the different vehicles are producing such a difference in results, a `deeper' penetration `MATTERS' Not the surface penetration into the follicles.
S Foote. said:This concerns the current theory you support, and there is just no way you can reconcile these studies to your theory, paricularly in the light of the the topical finasteride study in histutism.
http://www.aace.com/pub/ep/finasteride.php
Here a mere 0.25% Finasreride cream, showed much better results that the same spironolactone studies.
Simple conclusion, it is what is happening `outside' of the follicles in the deeper tisues that matters :wink:
Bryan said:S Foote. said:The current theory you support says that it is the androgen receptors in the follicles, that are important in both DHT related hair loss and hair growth. So topical spironolactone should effectively stop this hisutism dead!
Enough of the poor penetration excuse here. Both vehicles have enough research behind them for us to know the medication would at least be getting into the follicle cells, where you claim it matters!!
What should be obvious in these topical spironolactone tests, is that if the different vehicles are producing such a difference in results, a `deeper' penetration `MATTERS' Not the surface penetration into the follicles.
What a stinking pile of HORSE-sh*t. You've reached a new low, Stephen. Every reader here can tell that you're really scraping the bottom of the barrel now, in a futile attempt to salvage your theory. Your excuses are getting more and more ad hoc with each passing day.
http://www.aace.com/pub/ep/finasteride.php[/url]
Here a mere 0.25% Finasreride cream, showed much better results that the same spironolactone studies.
Simple conclusion, it is what is happening `outside' of the follicles in the deeper tisues that matters :wink:
I can't believe the NERVE you have, in trying to make everybody believe that study supports your zany theory. It showed a LOCAL EFFECT, for the love of god! It suppressed hair growth only where it was applied.
You're getting more and more desperate, and everybody knows it.
Bryan[/quote:b8d95]
What ever happened to any real science in your arguments Bryan?
Your sheer panic to try to salvage some personal prestige here is now clear for all to see :wink:
If you had a scientific argument (which you obviously Dont!), you would answer the specific points i raised! But we both know you can't do this, so as usual you just start rambling about my theory :roll:
There is a simple bottom line here as you well know Bryan, because it involves a basic point that disproves the theory you support altogether :wink: You know about this because i have raised this before and you have always avoided this issue!
Are you going to just concede this debate now Bryan, or do i have to post the relevant point you already `know' about, and embarrass you yet again?
S Foote.
Yes and the cream vehicle alone(placebo?) actually made the hirtuism worse. Now, from what I understand, that same vehicle is the same that they used for the spironolactone as well, that actually worked. Just think how much better the spironolactone would have done if they used a different cream vehicle that didn't make the hirtusim worse. I bet the positive results would have been doubled. I really think that spironolactone has its place in male pattern baldness, being a good androgen. And just remember they only used 1%. As far as I know, spironolactone is dose dependant. They should do a study on hirtuism with Dr. Lees 2% topical spironolactone solution and 5% topical spironolactone cream, and see which one does better. I bet the 5% cream would get the best results.Bryan said:S Foote. said:Let me enlighten you Bryan
Topical spironolactone has been shown to do what it was designed to do, that is effect the local androgen receptors.
Quote:
"Berardesca, E., P. Gabba, et al. (1988). "Topical spironolactone inhibits dihydrotestosterone receptors in human sebaceous glands: an autoradiographic study in subjects with acne vulgaris." International Journal of Tissue Reactions 10(2): 115-9.
There is no reason from this study, why spironolactone should not have the same effect upon the `local' androgen receptors in hair follicles!! :wink:
So the only conclusion we can reach from the failure of spironolactone in this hirstutism study, is that the androgen receptors in follicles `don't matter' in hair growth, and the receptors that `DO' matter are deeper and out of the reach of spironolactone![]()
This is yet another study result that the current theory you support just can't answer Bryan. 8)
Jesus Christ, can you even READ, Stephen?? There wasn't a "failure" of spironolactone in the hirsutism study, except with the ineffective alcoholic vehicle. It WORKED, when applied in the cream vehicle.
I predicted in that other thread that you would get busy and try to think-up some kooky explanation for the successful topical spironolactone experiment that would be compatible with your eccentric theory. But you gotta do a LOT better than just acknowledge the one failed result, and ignore the POSITIVE one! :wink:
Like I said before, this is yet another nail in the coffin for your theory.
Bryan
