Marmite?

levy

New Member
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Hello Everyone,


The questions are...Does Marmite placed on your head create hair growth?

If so..any special way to do this?

Answers by tomorrow plse.....Do read and leave answers ASAP


Thankyou

Levy :)
 

HairlossTalk

Senior Member
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Levy -

You may view the products that have been clinically proven to work, and those which have scientific backing on their ingredients, but have not been clinically proven... here:

http://www.hairlosstalk.com/research/me ... nt1men.htm
http://www.hairlosstalk.com/research/me ... nt2men.htm

The direct answer to your question is (1) We don't know what Marmite is, and (2) Unless it has clinical efficacy via scientific studies, claims cannot be made about whether it works or not, for hair loss.

HairLossTalk.com
 

Grantspots

Established Member
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Are you referring to the salty bitter paste the English put on their toast?

jerry grant
 
G

Guest

Guest
Yes!

But you have to post a pic so we can see if you are doing it correctly ;)

:laugh:

just kidding
 

levy

New Member
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My Mate (not me...I lost my hair and save on haircuts)

Hello again,

And Thankyou for your answers.

Am helping a friend out who wants his hair back, but, as it seems, just some medical solution is the answer to it all.

Thankyou to the one's who answered (again) and willing to peek in again before Tuesday arrives in U.K.

The Marmite thing could have been an old wive's tale.

From Levy :)
 

HairlossTalk

Senior Member
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Re: My Mate (not me...I lost my hair and save on haircuts)

levy said:
but, as it seems, just some medical solution is the answer to it all.
Unfortunately yes. Some people have a phobia to "medical" (more appropriately phrased "pharmaceutical") solutions, and they shouldn't really. Especially when they're proven to work and have more safety data than any "natural" product out there does.

We're stuck promoting the pharmaceutical route because want to give people the greatest chance of results, with 100% knowledge of the potential side effects, and .... nobody has bothered to do any clinical trials on any natural products. As a result, we promote what we know is safe, and what we know works.

Its not a bias against natural solutions - as I personally am an avid user of herbal supplements for personal health. I can't recommend them on a global scale here on HairLossTalk.com with a clear conscience, when I don't know if they work, or are safe.

A fellow posted just the other day that he had uncontrolled bleeding from an herbal supplement he was taking, that he heard worked for hair loss... because there was no data or documentation or doctor to warn him about the potential for it. :(

The goal is safety and effectiveness. Thanks for understanding!

HairLossTalk.com
 

UK1

Experienced Member
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marmite.jpeg
 

s.a.f

Senior Member
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LEVY :lol:
Think about it! :D
What possible reason could there be for a sandwich spread causing your hair to grow back. :roll:

(Funniest non CCS post ever).
 
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