Bryan said:So you think that drug companies like Merck and Glaxo have spent literally HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS of $$$ to produce patentable drugs to inhibit 5a-reductase, when all people really had to do was eat some flax to get the same effect??
Sorry, I don't buy it. I'd give you 1000-to-1 odds against that hypothesis! :wink:
Bryan
hairhaircomeagain said:PowerSam...once again..read th statement
"Flax secoisolariciresinol diglucoside (SDG) works, not lowering serum 5-alpha-reductase like Finasteride or Dutasteride, but instead bind to it. Lignans inhibit 5-alpha-reductase selectively and irreversibly binding with 5-alpha-reductase, thereby blocking conversion of testosterone to DHT. Enterolactone is found to inhibit 5-alpha-reductase up to 80%"
"does not lower" :?
sublime said:That's fine Aplunk as you long as people know it is just your opinion and you do not try and state it as a verfiable fact.
PowerSam said:so that means basically his whole paragraph was a waste of time? i just thought it was funny that he told me it didnt lower dht while telling me it did lower dht
Bryan said:sublime said:That's fine Aplunk as you long as people know it is just your opinion and you do not try and state it as a verfiable fact.
You know, I'm pretty damned sure that eating tomatoes (for example) doesn't prevent or cure male pattern baldness, even though I'm unable to cough-up any scientific studies that PROVE that it doesn't! :wink:
Bryan
Bryan said:I was referring to the first sentence, which has two laughable errors:
"Flax secoisolariciresinol diglucoside (SDG) works, not lowering serum 5-alpha-reductase like Finasteride or Dutasteride, but instead bind to it."
1) 5a-reductase doesn't exist in the blood serum. It's a cellular enzyme.
2) Finasteride and dutasteride work by binding to 5a-reductase, not by lowering levels of it.
Bryan
sublime said:Bryan said:sublime said:That's fine Aplunk as you long as people know it is just your opinion and you do not try and state it as a verfiable fact.
You know, I'm pretty damned sure that eating tomatoes (for example) doesn't prevent or cure male pattern baldness, even though I'm unable to cough-up any scientific studies that PROVE that it doesn't! :wink:
Bryan
Not sure what your point is other than trying to divert attention to tomato's for some unknown reason.
PowerSam said:so that means basically his whole paragraph was a waste of time? i just thought it was funny that he told me it didnt lower dht while telling me it did lower dht
Bryan said:sublime said:Bryan said:sublime said:That's fine Aplunk as you long as people know it is just your opinion and you do not try and state it as a verfiable fact.
You know, I'm pretty damned sure that eating tomatoes (for example) doesn't prevent or cure male pattern baldness, even though I'm unable to cough-up any scientific studies that PROVE that it doesn't! :wink:
Bryan
Not sure what your point is other than trying to divert attention to tomato's for some unknown reason.
I'm going to assume that you're just "playing dumb" here.
Bryan
sublime said:Anyway I know that in vitro obviously will not be the same as in vivo but it does show efficiency for flax SDG in relation to binding 5AR and thus preventing the conversion to DHT. The trial that they ran also proves that flax SDG is effective to some degree.
Bryan said:sublime said:Anyway I know that in vitro obviously will not be the same as in vivo but it does show efficiency for flax SDG in relation to binding 5AR and thus preventing the conversion to DHT. The trial that they ran also proves that flax SDG is effective to some degree.
But do you seriously think that eating flax is going to be anywhere NEARLY as effective at reducing DHT as the drugs designed for that purpose?? I don't. I would be amazed if it reduced it by even as much as 10%, not to mention the 70% that you get from finasteride, or the 90%+ from dutasteride.
You know, it's not like scientists never ever test natural substances (like herbs, or whatever) in living human beings for their ability to perform various functions or alter metabolism in various ways. For example, I can cite you a couple of fairly recent studies in which a hefty dose of GLA (gamma-linolenic acid) was given orally to human test subjects, and found not to have any significant effect at stopping the production of DHT. So testing like that _does_ happen occasionally. So if simply eating flax were as effective as taking finasteride or even dutasteride, don't you think some enterprising researcher would have noticed such an effect, and we ALL would have heard about it by now?
Bryan
