Has anyone tried Estradiol (Estragel?) topically with results?baller234 said:Women produce estradiol which protects hair and men don't.
Has anyone tried Estradiol (Estragel?) topically with results?baller234 said:Women produce estradiol which protects hair and men don't.
baller234 said:Androgenetic Alopecia is the same way. It is a gradual progression of increasing androgenic sensitivity, the rate of which is determined by the concentration of androgens.
baller234 said:Eating a high fiber, low fat, and low protein diet will increase SHBG and lower free testosterone and DHT...
Hoppi said:But... yeah I need proof, an actual scientific study that says that a gene is switched on due to a stimulus (be that diet, stress, age etc) and after that you lose hair because the gene is on.
baller234 said:baller234 said:In the absence of androgens these genes are dormant. In the presence of androgens, these genes become active.
The genes are only ACTIVE when there are androgens present. When androgens are taken away they become dormant (castration stops Androgenetic Alopecia). You have these genes from BIRTH.
Think of body hair. Prior to puberty, body/facial hair is thin/nonexistant. Once puberty begins these follicles are exposed to androgens and begin to grow. This doesn't happen overnight because androgenic sensitivty increases with age which is why men generally tend to get hairier as they age (think of the AVERAGE amount of body hair on an 18 year old compared to a 30 year old.)
Androgenetic Alopecia is the same way. It is a gradual progression of increasing androgenic sensitivity, the rate of which is determined by the concentration of androgens. There is no single event that takes place to make hair follicles "sensitive". You are born with "sensitive" hair follicles, to what extent is determined by genetics.
Bryan said:baller234 said:Eating a high fiber, low fat, and low protein diet will increase SHBG and lower free testosterone and DHT...
That last part about how SHBG supposedly lowers bioavailable androgens like testosterone and DHT is a claim that's been repeated by numerous people on this site, but it's always bothered me a great deal. I don't know of any specific medical evidence to support that simple assumption, probably because such evidence would be difficult to come by. I don't think people really appreciate all the implications. Consider this: if you supplied a moderate amount of extra SHBG to your body every day by injecting it into your bloodstream, wouldn't your brain simply notice that there was less androgenic stimulation going on at first, and then send the chemical signals to increase your production of testosterone (and DHT, in turn)? Can anybody explain to me why that wouldn't happen, and convince me that the original premise is correct?![]()
dpdr said:Hoppi said:But... yeah I need proof, an actual scientific study that says that a gene is switched on due to a stimulus (be that diet, stress, age etc) and after that you lose hair because the gene is on.
Hoppi, stop trolling in forum, you create many topics almost every week here :thumbdown2:
You want to stop the male pattern baldness ? Start using RU58841 and low doses of spironolactone Oral, Or start thinking about castration
Hoppi said:Bryan said:That last part about how SHBG supposedly lowers bioavailable androgens like testosterone and DHT is a claim that's been repeated by numerous people on this site, but it's always bothered me a great deal. I don't know of any specific medical evidence to support that simple assumption, probably because such evidence would be difficult to come by. I don't think people really appreciate all the implications. Consider this: if you supplied a moderate amount of extra SHBG to your body every day by injecting it into your bloodstream, wouldn't your brain simply notice that there was less androgenic stimulation going on at first, and then send the chemical signals to increase your production of testosterone (and DHT, in turn)? Can anybody explain to me why that wouldn't happen, and convince me that the original premise is correct?![]()
SHBG binds to FREE testosterone and estrogen, not the stuff your body needs. It... kinda mops up the free stuff and stops it getting too high. It's your body's way of balancing sex hormones. That is why lignans are so praised, because they increase SHBG and so mop up your T and E that flows free and removes it naturally and healthily so it can't have any unwanted effects (including increasing hair loss).
Hoppi said:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_hormone-binding_globulin
Here you go: "Testosterone and estradiol circulate in the bloodstream, bound mostly to SHBG and to some degree bound to serum albumin. Only a small fraction is unbound, or "free," and thus biologically active and able to enter a cell and activate its receptor. The SHBG inhibits the function of these hormones. Thus bioavailability of sex hormones is influenced by the level of SHBG."
Hoppi said:I'm sure there is other good stuff online but, I've read more than enough stuff to back this up and believe good SHBG levels are very important if not essential, particularly for younger guys. There is a huge paper on it somewhere as a pdf I'll see if I can find it at some point![]()
Bryan said:baller234 said:Eating a high fiber, low fat, and low protein diet will increase SHBG and lower free testosterone and DHT...
That last part about how SHBG supposedly lowers bioavailable androgens like testosterone and DHT is a claim that's been repeated by numerous people on this site, but it's always bothered me a great deal. I don't know of any specific medical evidence to support that simple assumption, probably because such evidence would be difficult to come by. I don't think people really appreciate all the implications. Consider this: if you supplied a moderate amount of extra SHBG to your body every day by injecting it into your bloodstream, wouldn't your brain simply notice that there was less androgenic stimulation going on at first, and then send the chemical signals to increase your production of testosterone (and DHT, in turn)? Can anybody explain to me why that wouldn't happen, and convince me that the original premise is correct?![]()
Brains Expel Hair said:It might not be a simple if A then B sort of connection. The first part of the statement (x dietary change increases SHBG) is most likely quite true and for a reason that might actually explain the second part of the statement. Such a high carb, low protein/fat diet would actually cause a decrease in production of androgens as well as an increase in estrogens, this change in balance of hormones would actually cause the increase in SHBG, not necessarily the other way around.
Why? People like Hoppi are the reasons why the human race evolves. He asks questions. Questions trigger people to LOOK UP new found answers, and change how we think about conventional solutions. Sure, not all of his questions and thoughts are exactly... well... sensible, but, as with anything in life, it takes many failures to become successful.dpdr said:Hoppi, stop trolling in forum, you create many topics almost every week here :thumbdown2:
I can't cite anything to be honest, but just to be a neutral fence sitter (and so that brian can sleep good tonight), I put that in there :mrgreen:Hoppi said:lol cheers man
But just so I can get better or explain myself or something - which questions/thoughts didn't you think were sensible? heh ._.
KANGA said:I can't cite anything to be honest, but just to be a neutral fence sitter (and so that brian can sleep good tonight), I put that in there :mrgreen:Hoppi said:lol cheers man
But just so I can get better or explain myself or something - which questions/thoughts didn't you think were sensible? heh ._.
Hoppi said:Come on, no I'm not going down this road. SHBG is not a "theory", SHBG is not a hypothetical - according to mainstream scientific consensus SHBG is as real as blood or DHT.
I'm tired of having these arguments against opinions that fly in the face of all accepted science.
Just Google it... http://lmgtfy.com/?q=shbg
Hoppi
Hoppi said:Come on, no I'm not going down this road. SHBG is not a "theory", SHBG is not a hypothetical - according to mainstream scientific consensus SHBG is as real as blood or DHT.
Hoppi said:I really don't understand this anti-SHBG stuff, I discovered this stuff and made most of these hormonal links before I even joined HairLossTalk.com or knew of misterE. We had differing views on what SHBG actually DOES (mine is the commonly accepted scientific view, the one stated on Wikipedia, in articles, papers, pretty much everything that Google search will throw up, etc), but both agreed that lifting it is very important as part of an overall regimen. As part of a holistic regimen aimed at tackling hair loss root causes particularly in younger guys with high T, it is damn near essential![]()
Bryan said:Hoppi said:And I'm suggesting to you that as long as questions like the one I posed earlier in this thread remain unanswered, it's far too premature to make the claim that raising SHBG is "damn near essential".
