stay or loss it

longhorn

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http://www.hairloss-research.org/protocol.htm

ROGAINE CONTRAINDICATED

Based on the preponderance of studies and anecdotal reports, we have omitted Rogaine 2 and 5% from our protocol. It appears that Rogaine, despite its short term effectiveness in some patients almost invariably loses its effectiveness due to tolerance. The usual timeframe on tolerance to set in is from 12 to 18 months. More importantly, it causes a tremendous amount of shedding in all patients upon stoppage. Of real concern is that this shedding is typically above and beyond what one would have normally gained through any treatment response. This phenomena is clinically termed loss of “minoxidil dependent hairâ€￾, and implies that stopping minoxidil use may result in loss of hair that may have been otherwise unaffected by androgenetic alopecia (pattern loss). Stopping other treatments such as Propecia will result in a gradual regression to the pre-treatment state. With Minoxidil this loss is much more dramatic. This seems to occur regardless of other treatments being used to offset this process. Any review of the medical literature will confirm its transient and marginal effectiveness at both 2 and 5 percent concentrations. If you are currently using Rogaine you would be well advised to stay on it, however you will likely need to use increasingly higher concentrations to maintain any results. In fact there is a 12.5% version being made available by one doctor. If you are currently using Rogaine and chose to get off it would be wise to gradually reduce your usage and substitute the Pyridine-N-Oxides (Dr. Proctor) to avoid the hair loss that invariably occurs with the cessation of Minoxidil treatment. Because of the similarity in their core technology, the Pyridine-N-Oxides appear unique in their ability to do this. The current thinking on Rogaine by several practitioners is that it is best avoided altogether


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One reasons why I would not touch Rogaine. I would rather maintain with Proscar and Nizoral for the time being and then look into a more permanent procedure if my hair can stabilise.

It appears that Rogaine is just a short term fix and that eventually you will lose out big time. I think people have been on finasteride for about 5 - 6 years before they start to lose again. By this time I might not even be bothered about hairloss anymore.
 

Kramer3

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Since you guys are new here you don't realize that this topic has been discussed to the point of exhaustion.

Rogaine is not a short term fix. After benefitting from it you will not lose out big time in the long run. What it does provide you with is an offset of growth which will increase your hair density. This offset of growth is not continual which is why when you steadily begin to lose hair in the future it appears as if it is due to minoxidil losing it's effectiveness.
 

longhorn

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i have been using Minoxidil 5% for 3 weeks .And yes it did it job.i have lots of hair sprouting on frontal. which was very good sign.say that i want to stop taking minoxidil for awhile and just countinueing with propecia. will i lost those hair ?, ihave been taking propecia for 48 days and minoxidil for 3 weeks.
 

Kramer3

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Any gains that are the product of minoxidil will most likely remain only for as long as you continue to use it. That is why minoxidil cannot be used on a short-term basis and is a treatment that if seriously persued must be carried on continually for an extended period of time ( etc.. five years)
 
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