abcdefg said:Is it normal to lose a little hair in the very back and sides the areas supposedly resistant to DHT? Why do these hairs not become sensitive to DHT at puberty like other hairs?
michael barry said:DHT binds with receptor sites with roughly five times the affinity of Testosterone itself according to what Ive read lately. DHT and T are easily the primary androgens that cause male hairloss. Judging by the haircounts when one takes dutasteride, I think its rather safe to say that if you dont have anymore DHT, you probably will keep the hair you have for the most part. Other androgens can bind, and they elicit the same downstream response, but if DHT is taken away there is so much less androgenic stimulation in totality, that the other androgens probably cannot progress baldness very much all by themselves with out the DHT.
However, since finas only stops 80-85 percent or so of type 2 DHT, you still have enough for a very slow progression of baldness over many years on it.
DHT is made in the outer rootsheath of the hair follicle itself and the prostate tissues. Its in your beard and body hair too.
JayMan said:michael barry said:DHT binds with receptor sites with roughly five times the affinity of Testosterone itself according to what Ive read lately. DHT and T are easily the primary androgens that cause male hairloss. Judging by the haircounts when one takes dutasteride, I think its rather safe to say that if you dont have anymore DHT, you probably will keep the hair you have for the most part. Other androgens can bind, and they elicit the same downstream response, but if DHT is taken away there is so much less androgenic stimulation in totality, that the other androgens probably cannot progress baldness very much all by themselves with out the DHT.
However, since finas only stops 80-85 percent or so of type 2 DHT, you still have enough for a very slow progression of baldness over many years on it.
DHT is made in the outer rootsheath of the hair follicle itself and the prostate tissues. Its in your beard and body hair too.
Hi michael barry,
Good point about finas only blocking 80-85% of the type 2. With dutasteride blocking more than 95% of type 2 in the follicles and half of type 1 to boot, what do you think the chances are that my hair never gets any worse than it is now while on avodart 0.5 mg every day and revita shampoo 5x a week? i also use nano shampoo 4 days a week and might add minoxidil in august. if my hair is still the same as it is now in 2012, is it safe to say that i'll keep it for life? i mean with only 2% or so of type 2 DHT remaining from the avodart, I'm not that worried about only 2%, but I am slightly worried about the other androgens like testosterone. you don't think these would progress it much if at all?
thanks. i know other people on here are wondering the same thing, like ccs, and others on dutasteride.
p.s.- do you think that avodart can help keep the hair on the sides and back of the head from thinning as it typically does with elderly balding men? i would think so.
p.p.s.- final question i thought of i promise. how much more DHT is there in the average balding man than plain testosterone? 10 times as much? I've never read anything on this so I'm curious. Doesn't all the testosterone that would have been converted to DHT had it not been avodart just end staying as plain testosterone that is free to damage hair on its own?
hair today gone tomorrow said:JayMan said:[quote="michael barry":080b6]DHT binds with receptor sites with roughly five times the affinity of Testosterone itself according to what Ive read lately. DHT and T are easily the primary androgens that cause male hairloss. Judging by the haircounts when one takes dutasteride, I think its rather safe to say that if you dont have anymore DHT, you probably will keep the hair you have for the most part. Other androgens can bind, and they elicit the same downstream response, but if DHT is taken away there is so much less androgenic stimulation in totality, that the other androgens probably cannot progress baldness very much all by themselves with out the DHT.
However, since finas only stops 80-85 percent or so of type 2 DHT, you still have enough for a very slow progression of baldness over many years on it.
DHT is made in the outer rootsheath of the hair follicle itself and the prostate tissues. Its in your beard and body hair too.
Hi michael barry,
Good point about finas only blocking 80-85% of the type 2. With dutasteride blocking more than 95% of type 2 in the follicles and half of type 1 to boot, what do you think the chances are that my hair never gets any worse than it is now while on avodart 0.5 mg every day and revita shampoo 5x a week? i also use nano shampoo 4 days a week and might add minoxidil in august. if my hair is still the same as it is now in 2012, is it safe to say that i'll keep it for life? i mean with only 2% or so of type 2 DHT remaining from the avodart, I'm not that worried about only 2%, but I am slightly worried about the other androgens like testosterone. you don't think these would progress it much if at all?
thanks. i know other people on here are wondering the same thing, like ccs, and others on dutasteride.
p.s.- do you think that avodart can help keep the hair on the sides and back of the head from thinning as it typically does with elderly balding men? i would think so.
p.p.s.- final question i thought of i promise. how much more DHT is there in the average balding man than plain testosterone? 10 times as much? I've never read anything on this so I'm curious. Doesn't all the testosterone that would have been converted to DHT had it not been avodart just end staying as plain testosterone that is free to damage hair on its own?
michael barry said:DHT binds with receptor sites with roughly five times the affinity of Testosterone itself according to what Ive read lately. DHT and T are easily the primary androgens that cause male hairloss. Judging by the haircounts when one takes dutasteride, I think its rather safe to say that if you dont have anymore DHT, you probably will keep the hair you have for the most part. Other androgens can bind, and they elicit the same downstream response, but if DHT is taken away there is so much less androgenic stimulation in totality, that the other androgens probably cannot progress baldness very much all by themselves with out the DHT.
However, since finas only stops 80-85 percent or so of type 2 DHT, you still have enough for a very slow progression of baldness over many years on it.
DHT is made in the outer rootsheath of the hair follicle itself and the prostate tissues. Its in your beard and body hair too.
hair today gone tomorrow said:[quote="michael barry":4a140]DHT binds with receptor sites with roughly five times the affinity of Testosterone itself according to what Ive read lately. DHT and T are easily the primary androgens that cause male hairloss. Judging by the haircounts when one takes dutasteride, I think its rather safe to say that if you dont have anymore DHT, you probably will keep the hair you have for the most part. Other androgens can bind, and they elicit the same downstream response, but if DHT is taken away there is so much less androgenic stimulation in totality, that the other androgens probably cannot progress baldness very much all by themselves with out the DHT.
However, since finas only stops 80-85 percent or so of type 2 DHT, you still have enough for a very slow progression of baldness over many years on it.
DHT is made in the outer rootsheath of the hair follicle itself and the prostate tissues. Its in your beard and body hair too.
