- Reaction score
- 43
Hoppi said:Bryan said:Not me. I think it's a pretty silly way to argue in support of the idea that estrogen is bad for hair.
I didn't say that. I said estrogen-triggered prostate production of DHT is bad for hair.
That's my point.
I already _know_ what your point is. You think that estrogen is bad for hair indirectly by enlarging the prostate, causing it to make more DHT. And I'm saying that that's a silly argument to make, because serum DHT (from the prostate) has no significant effect on hair follicles.
And then there's the separate issue that reducing (or increasing, for that matter) estrogen may not even affect the size of the prostate in the first place, according to that study I mentioned.
Hoppi said:Now that really is interesting about inhibiting estrogen not helping... it's quite confusing as apparently estrogen inhibits T production. This suggests that if you LOWER estrogen, you will lift testosterone a little...
Yes. Exactly. It's not "confusing" at all, it's basic physiology.
Hoppi said:It is also known that the prostate grows as men get older. It would therefore probably be releasing more DHT into the blood.
I don't think that's relevant to anything.
Hoppi said:There are simply so many factors here. SOMETHING is triggering the prostate to enlarge and produce more DHT. That is the part that matters. We can dance around the specifics all night but the point is that when that happens, it causes hair loss.
Nope. It does NOT cause hair loss.
Hoppi said:Male pattern hair loss is usually NOT an isolated incident. Unless your hormones make you particularly susceptible, it usually goes hand in hand with other hormone-triggered phenomena in the body, and only by isolating the root cause are we ever going to treat it in a healthy way, or stand a chance of actually curing someone![]()
I think balding IS an isolated incident, at least for the most part. I think it has to do (mostly, like maybe 95% or so) with characteristics inside the hair follicle itself, dealing with its sensitivity to androgens. But if you want to experiment endlessly with other things (like various dietary issues) that have some modest effect on that remaining 5%, be my guest!
