Petchsky said:Hey Bryan, i've been doing some research and looking up topical anti androgens, what are your thoughts on flutimide? seems to me like it may be more effective than spironolactone...
Petchsky said:Also, what do you think about Revivogen?
Petchsky said:Treeshaw/Diehard
You are both right, i have a new girlfriend and basically freaked out like a newbie when i had problems getting wood, what i needed was a b**ch slap, where were you guys huh?. Easier to blame proscar than the incessant drinking, lack of exercise, drugs etc that has characterised the last few months.
Treeshaw - the earliest photos i have to compare my hair is from 2004, not 2002 unfortunately, but when looking at a photo of my hair now and then it's really hard to tell if i have lost any ground at all, i don't know your regimen but i feel nizoral and min have really helped strengthen and prolong the effects of proscar.
$tackz said:don't mistake what bryan's saying though as he is a little tricky with words... he calls flutamide a "lousy" topical anti-androgen because it has little to no local effect, but instead works by being absorbed systematically. this of course says nothing about it's effectiveness, just that it has a higher incidence of side effects which may scare some people. in general users report MUCH success treating male pattern baldness with flutamide. *cue Bryan coming in to say why not just swallow it*
$tackz said:spironolactone get's a bad rap from people simply because it doesn't work. It's been proven to shrink and reduce sebaceous gland size in hamster flanks organs which in theory should correlate with male pattern baldness in humans however that is clearly not the case. in my opinion it just doesn't work and there isn't one success story online with pictures to prove otherwise!
SoThatsLife said:Bryan, if spironolactone don't have a effective anti-androgen, what makes Proxiphen so special that you say it is the best treatment without finasteride? I thought every treatment needed a anti-androgen.
Bryan said:Oh, I think it works a little, it's just nothing to write home about. [...] There's also the paper on topical spironolactone for hairloss that Dr. Proctor described being passed around at the medical conference he attended once. He said the haircount improvements were roughly similar to what you get with Propecia.
