justwannagetsum
New member
I would like to see any solid research that it helps your hair grow. or prevents it from falling out. Its just an anti-fungal.......
SOLID said:so do it yourself...www.google.com
justwannagetsum said:so do it yourself
I dont need to. I think a lot of bros are wasting their funds....
justwannagetsum said:so do it yourself
I dont need to. I think a lot of bros are wasting their funds....
With all due respect, that was a very ignorant statement.
Bro, you have to understand that this is just the sort of attitude that make responsible users of anabolic drugs cringe. If your not even willing to research your own inquiry, you have no bussiness forming an opinion one way or the other.justwannagetsum said:I dont need to. I think a lot of bros are wasting their funds....
Silent Method said:
Bro, you have to understand that this is just the sort of attitude that make responsible users of anabolic drugs cringe. If your not even willing to research your own inquiry, you have no bussiness forming an opinion one way or the other.
Silent Method said:
Bro, you have to understand that this is just the sort of attitude that make responsible users of anabolic drugs cringe. If your not even willing to research your own inquiry, you have no bussiness forming an opinion one way or the other.
justwannagetsum said:well I suppose I just looked through a pharmocolgy textbook and the PDR and didnt find anything suggesting it has anti-androgenic effect. Idid a search on this board and found a lot of people suggesting it and not seeing anything backing it up (maybe i never made it to the research part). I used it for months and didnt get any good results. and I saw Mike PT's post and it made me wonder if this wasn't a myth that people perpetuate with nothing to back it up (as can happen, no?)
So I guess I ruined a lot of peoples' day here because there are some angry posts... I am sorry...
So again, justwannagetsome, I call on you for a response: rational and measured, no doubt. We justwannahearfromyou
Thats clever doc, justwannahearfromyou.
Nizoral Shampoo for Hair Loss
Doctors have known for a long time that Nizoral shampoo, in prescription and non-prescription strength, works well for controlling dandruff. But at last year´s meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology, a group of scientists suggested that over-the-counter Nizoral might also be useful as a hair loss remedy.
The researchers compared Nizoral A-D Shampoo, containing 1% ketoconazole (the active ingredient), to another shampoo containing 1% zinc pyrithione. Zinc pyrithione is the active ingredient in dandruff shampoos such as Head & Shoulders. They found that Nizoral increased hair thickness and decreased hair shedding, whereas the zinc pyrithione shampoo had the opposite effect.
Their presentation didn´t make a big splash then, and it has faded into obscurity since. That´s probably because what they presented were the results of a preliminary study--the results have not yet been duplicated in other studies by other researchers--and perhaps because the scientists who did the research were under the employ of McNeil pharmaceuticals, the company that makes Nizoral.
Still, it´s not all flimflam. The study met the basic standards of good research: It was a randomized, double-blinded study. That means the researchers used a random process to decide who would use Nizoral and who would use the zinc pyrithione shampoo. Also, the study participants didn´t know which shampoo they were using, and neither did the researchers, until the results were in. Both of these measures are important in conducting a scientific study because they help eliminate any bias the researcher s or the study participants may have, which could skew the results.
Here is how the study was done:
Forty-four men with "mild to moderate dandruff and somewhat oily scalp" used Nizoral A-D Shampoo two or three times a week for six months, and 43 men with the same scalp problems used a dandruff shampoo containing zinc pyrithione just as frequently over the same period of time. Both shampoos had the same percentage (1%) of the active ingredient in them.
At the beginning of the study, the researchers looked at the health of the men´s hair and scalp. They counted the number of hairs growing on the scalp. They also measured the diameter of the hairs, and how many hairs fell out over a 24-hour period. They took these measurements again one month into the study, then again at three months, and one last time at six months.
The researchers found that the men using Nizoral had about an 8% increase in the thickness of their hair. The men using the zinc pyrithione shampoo had no such increase. In fact, their hair decreased in thickness by about 2%. The men who used Nizoral also shed fewer hairs over a 24-hour period than the zinc pyrithione shampoo users did. The Nizoral users shed about 16% fewer hairs, whereas the zinc pyrithione users shed about 6% fewer hairs.
The Nizoral users, however, had fewer hairs growing on the scalp at the end of six months than the zinc pyrithione users did. That means fewer of their hair follicles were in "anagen phase."
Not all the hair on your head grows at once. At any given time, some hair follicles are dormant, while others are actively pushing out hair: They´re in the anagen phase, which lasts about two to six years. After a short transitional phase, the dormant phase, or "telogen" phase begins, lasting about five to six weeks. When a follicle goes back into anagen phase, the hair that had been growing from it falls out, and a new hair begins to grow.
In the study, both the Nizoral users and the zinc pyrithione users had an increase in the number of hairs in anagen phase. The Nizoral group had about 6% more, whereas the zinc pyrithione had about 8% more.
These results may seem to prove that Nizoral A-D works against hair loss, but they really don´t: They merely suggest it. Scientists might be able to get a better idea of how well Nizoral works as a hair-loss remedy if they were to do a placebo-controlled study. That means one group of people would use Nizoral A-D, while another group would use a shampoo that contains no medicine at all.
One 1998 study showed that prescription-strength Nizoral, which contains 2% ketoconazole, worked just as well as minoxidil (brand name Rogaine) in men with androgenic alopecia (male hereditary balding). Both medicines increased hair thickness and increased the number of anagen-phase hair follicles on the scalp. But the researchers were guarded about the meaning of these results, saying that more rigorous studies on larger groups of men should be done.
The most certain results come from placebo-controlled studies done in more than one place, on groups of people that fit a wider profile (not just men with dandruff, in the case of the Nizoral A-D study). This is what´s known as the "gold standard" for medical research--in scientific terms, a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multicenter study. This is the kind of study that the US Food and Drug Administration wants to see before it will approve a medicine for a particular use.
Nizoral A-D Shampoo has met the FDA´s standards as a dandruff treatment, but you will not see the shampoo advertised by its makers as a hair loss remedy. It would be illegal for them to do so, because that has not been proven.
The only medicines scientifically proven to regrow hair in some men with hereditary balding are minoxdil and finasteride (brand name Propecia). Even so, if you´re willing to accept the Nizoral A-D study at face value, you may want to try it for yourself.
While you´re thinking about it, however, do consider that it may cause some side effects, like pimples on the scalp, or itching and dryness. You should also ask your doctor about it if you´re taking any other medications, and you shouldn´t use it if you´re allergic to any of the ingredients.
There´s no guarantee that using Nizoral A-D will give you a thicker head of hair, but you´ll probably have less dandruff--assuming you have dandruff. If you´ve never had problems with dandruff, then you´re just buying an expensive shampoo for unproven benefits. Nizoral A-D costs about $10 for a 4-ounce bottle, compared to about $2 for a 16-ounce bottle bargain shampoo.
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