Culturing Cells for More Effective Hair-loss Treatments

c_super2

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Although hair loss is not a life-threatening condition, it can be emotionally challenging for those who have it. Current treatments can restore hair growth in mild cases, but are less successful on larger bald areas.Now, researchers report in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces that they have developed a new technique to culture hair-producing cells in the lab that someday could help hair grow back even better than before.


From the earliest known times, people have grappled with hair loss. The ancient Egyptians, for example, would slather animal fats on their scalps to encourage regrowth. One approach modern researchers have taken is to grow dermal papilla (DP) cells in the lab. Culturing cells on the bottom surface of a plate works for many medical applications, but hair cells lose their ability to make hair when cultured in this 2-D fashion.
To better mimic the natural environment cells experience inside the body, researchers have developed 3-D cell culturing techniques, but these have limitations. So, Zhiqi Hu, Malcolm Xing and colleagues decided to make improvements and test the system with DP cells.
The researchers exploited surface tension to create a novel hanging-drop technique using microplates with tiny wells in them. The method has the ability to control DP tissue size and stability, and it is suitable for large-scale production, unlike other 3-D procedures.
The team used the technique to successfully culture DP cells while maintaining their function. They then implanted these DP “spheroidsâ€￾ into nude mice, the lab equivalent of bald humans. These mice were able to grow hair even better than control mice. The researchers say that these results show potential to produce DP cells that can be used in human hair regrowth treatments.



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Look like nobody has heard about this. They claim to have solved the DP culturing problem.

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Source: http://www.laboratoryequipment.com/news/2016/03/culturing-cells-more-effective-hair-loss-treatments
 

nameless

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Although hair loss is not a life-threatening condition, it can be emotionally challenging for those who have it. Current treatments can restore hair growth in mild cases, but are less successful on larger bald areas.Now, researchers report in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces that they have developed a new technique to culture hair-producing cells in the lab that someday could help hair grow back even better than before.


From the earliest known times, people have grappled with hair loss. The ancient Egyptians, for example, would slather animal fats on their scalps to encourage regrowth. One approach modern researchers have taken is to grow dermal papilla (DP) cells in the lab. Culturing cells on the bottom surface of a plate works for many medical applications, but hair cells lose their ability to make hair when cultured in this 2-D fashion.
To better mimic the natural environment cells experience inside the body, researchers have developed 3-D cell culturing techniques, but these have limitations. So, Zhiqi Hu, Malcolm Xing and colleagues decided to make improvements and test the system with DP cells.
The researchers exploited surface tension to create a novel hanging-drop technique using microplates with tiny wells in them. The method has the ability to control DP tissue size and stability, and it is suitable for large-scale production, unlike other 3-D procedures.
The team used the technique to successfully culture DP cells while maintaining their function. They then implanted these DP “spheroids” into nude mice, the lab equivalent of bald humans. These mice were able to grow hair even better than control mice. The researchers say that these results show potential to produce DP cells that can be used in human hair regrowth treatments.



...............................
Look like nobody has heard about this. They claim to have solved the DP culturing problem.

- - - Updated - - -

Source: http://www.laboratoryequipment.com/news/2016/03/culturing-cells-more-effective-hair-loss-treatments


It sounds like they've solved the key problem. Now how long till we can get this treatment?
 

Pray The Bald Away

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That's what I thought. I want to know as well. Maybe we should contact them and ask questions.
Would this allow us to multiply donor hairs and fill in our entire scalp? Holy f**k, is this the cure? When is this paper from c_super2?
 

Pray The Bald Away

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Would this allow us to multiply donor hairs and fill in our entire scalp? Holy f**k, is this the cure? When is this paper from c_super2?
Nevermind, I just saw it was from 3 days ago. Why is this not getting more coverage?
 

c_super2

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Would this allow us to multiply donor hairs and fill in our entire scalp? Holy f**k, is this the cure? When is this paper from c_super2?

Source is here: http://www.laboratoryequipment.com/news/2016/03/culturing-cells-more-effective-hair-loss-treatments

Theoretically, if they solved the DP culturing problem it should be considered a cure by way of a hair transplant of the DP cells. Anyone disagree? That is what i believe but i don't know. But one thing is for sure that this is the holy grail of hair loss research and if its not a cure in itself, it will speed up finding the cure. There are many questions up in the air which is why i think we should contact them.

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Nevermind, I just saw it was from 3 days ago. Why is this not getting more coverage?

That's what i want to know. Maybe they will in time.
 

Pray The Bald Away

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Source is here: http://www.laboratoryequipment.com/news/2016/03/culturing-cells-more-effective-hair-loss-treatments

Theoretically, if they solved the DP culturing problem it should be considered a cure by way of a hair transplant of the DP cells. Anyone disagree? That is what i believe but i don't know. But one thing is for sure that this is the holy grail of hair loss research and if its not a cure in itself, it will speed up finding the cure. There are many questions up in the air which is why i think we should contact them.

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That's what i want to know. Maybe they will in time.
I'm kind of freaking out right now. This may be a cure to lack of beard growth too! I feel like someone will show up and hit me with a dose of reality but I'm still excited. Man bun and mountain man beard, here I come. What do you think nameless? I know you're a little more educated on the hard science of this stuff.
 

c_super2

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I'm kind of freaking out right now. This may be a cure to lack of beard growth too! I feel like someone will show up and hit me with a dose of reality but I'm still excited. Man bun and mountain man beard, here I come. What do you think nameless? I know you're a little more educated on the hard science of this stuff.

I think I read in a thread that you’re 17. You’re much better off than when I was 17. I just turned 29. When I was your age on HairLossTalk.com there was literally NOTHING to look forward to. The hype back then was Dr. Gho and hair cloning but there was not substantial science behind it unlike now. I never felt it would be a cure and I told everyone that back then and I was right. There were too many unanswered questions that have been answered since then. I don’t know when the cure or a good treatment will be released, but just know you’re in a much better boat than I was in. Im sure by the time you are my age they will know a ton more about hair loss than now. The field is accelerating. So stay positive but realistic.

 

nameless

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Source is here: http://www.laboratoryequipment.com/news/2016/03/culturing-cells-more-effective-hair-loss-treatments

Theoretically, if they solved the DP culturing problem it should be considered a cure by way of a hair transplant of the DP cells. Anyone disagree? That is what i believe but i don't know. But one thing is for sure that this is the holy grail of hair loss research and if its not a cure in itself, it will speed up finding the cure. There are many questions up in the air which is why i think we should contact them.

I also think that if the Chinese achievement is verified then it's basically a "cure". Others complain that the hair color might not
be right but that's irrelevant because we could dye our hair to make it all the same color. We need this to come to market asap.

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I'm kind of freaking out right now. This may be a cure to lack of beard growth too! I feel like someone will show up and hit me with a dose of reality but I'm still excited. Man bun and mountain man beard, here I come. What do you think nameless? I know you're a little more educated on the hard science of this stuff.

If this achievement is verified then I think it's the breakthrough we've been waiting for.

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Does anyone know the contact information (especially email) to the team involved in this Chinese breakthrough. I think we should be contacting them and talking to them about putting this technology
on the market soon. I think it might be worth trying to convince them to put it on the market after a phase 1. I don't think they will do it but they might. We should try. We really only need 1 human study to know if
it works or not and they are readying to start that one human study now. It would be nifty if they could go from one human study to the marketplace somewhere in the world. Anywhere. And there are places where
one human study is all that is required, and there are places in the world where no human studies are required. I think we should talk to them about this...point out to them that if they make it available sooner they
could start making profit sooner.
 

macbeth81

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If they could license this to replicel this would be awesome, isn't this the missing piece of the jigsaw with RCH-01...

RepliCel does not use dermal papilla cells. I was under the impression from the hellouser interviews that they thought their cells (dermal sheath cup cells) maintained their function.

The ancient Egyptians, for example, would slather animal fats on their scalps to encourage regrowth.

Ancient version of Kerastem?
 

distracted

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Does anyone know the contact information (especially email) to the team involved in this Chinese breakthrough. I think we should be contacting them and talking to them about putting this technology
on the market soon. I think it might be worth trying to convince them to put it on the market after a phase 1. I don't think they will do it but they might. We should try. We really only need 1 human study to know if
it works or not and they are readying to start that one human study now. It would be nifty if they could go from one human study to the marketplace somewhere in the world. Anywhere. And there are places where
one human study is all that is required, and there are places in the world where no human studies are required. I think we should talk to them about this...point out to them that if they make it available sooner they
could start making profit sooner.

http://www.hairlosscure2020.com/category/malcolm-xing/

http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/engineering/departments/mechanical/staff/profiles/xing.html
 

Pray The Bald Away

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Won't they still have to work on cost reuduction before creating an actual hair loss treatment?

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I think I read in a thread that you’re 17. You’re much better off than when I was 17. I just turned 29. When I was your age on HairLossTalk.com there was literally NOTHING to look forward to. The hype back then was Dr. Gho and hair cloning but there was not substantial science behind it unlike now. I never felt it would be a cure and I told everyone that back then and I was right. There were too many unanswered questions that have been answered since then. I don’t know when the cure or a good treatment will be released, but just know you’re in a much better boat than I was in. Im sure by the time you are my age they will know a ton more about hair loss than now. The field is accelerating. So stay positive but realistic.

I'm just really hoping we can get a cure in the next 5 years. I don't ever want to go full blown NW6.
 

c_super2

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I'm just really hoping we can get a cure in the next 5 years. I don't ever want to go full blown NW6.

Pray for kerastem and replicil to work. If they are successful they can hold you over until we have even better treatments or even shall I say “the cure.”
 
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