Has anyone ever done Hair Club for Men or Bosley or any of those hair replacement programs?

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FreeRyanFerguson.com
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I'm bald on the top and it is escalating to the front. I probably have about 3-5 years before I have to shave my head to avoid the Kevin Stallings Island-Do. I'm not getting a Lou Henson-Do or a JJGold-rug. But the commercials seem halfway convincing that they can give you hair plugs and regrow your hair. Just wondering if anyone did it and is satisfied or unsatisfied.
 

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Depends 100% on who your doctor is... so investigate around your city.. and pay the extra 2000...
I was considering same thing..
 

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I did the Bosley transplant about 3 years ago..hair went from thick beautiful locks to thin whispy strands very quickly so I decided to pull the trigger. To begin with I would have to say yes I am happy and that it did help. It is a one day out patient procedure but does have some minor pain involved but not bad. I'm sure you know this but they transplant hair from the back of your head which is usually the thickest and insert tiny follicles from that strand wherever it is decided is necessary. I would go have another one done to add more thickness if it wasn't so costly. I want to say with the laser comb and procedure in total I paid around 12K for it. You pay per follicle so the price will have a range depending on how many you need. Hair isn't close to what it used to be but I'd probably be close to the point of shaving my head and now when it's fixed doubt anyone who didn't see me with thick hair would even question how my hair looked. You can also take Propecia which helps thicken and keeps your existing hair so you don't lose anymore.
 
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never had thoughts about doing this... figure when it goes.. it goes ... and it has been going . lol
 

She is either funnin' or bunnin' or else I am runn
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laser comb is bullshit.

paid $300 for nothing. Gives head aches after 20 minutes.
 

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Lattice works... but shampoos do not...

2 options.
1. Hair transplant
2. Lattice
Lattice was developed for glaucoma. And as a side effect it's the only product ever made that will grow hair Werever it's applied
 

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I'm bald on the top and it is escalating to the front. I probably have about 3-5 years before I have to shave my head to avoid the Kevin Stallings Island-Do. I'm not getting a Lou Henson-Do or a JJGold-rug. But the commercials seem halfway convincing that they can give you hair plugs and regrow your hair. Just wondering if anyone did it and is satisfied or unsatisfied.

Not sure which procedure my friend tried and he wasn't satisfied. Why not shave your head bald?
 

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Lattice works... but shampoos do not...

2 options.
1. Hair transplant
2. Lattice
Lattice was developed for glaucoma. And as a side effect it's the only product ever made that will grow hair Werever it's applied

I see Lattice used on eye lashes because of the side effects it got (as you mentioned for glaucoma). Does this work on the scalp too?
 

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Latisse is used to thicken eyelashes it will not grow hair only thicken whats already there. Cost would be a factor if used on scalp 2oz. cost about $100
 

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I have thick hair everywhere except the very top back portion of my scalp. If you placed 2 silver dollars there it would cover up the thinning hair there. It's not gone, but is thin. So I shave my head with no guard on the clippers. I do this because if I look in a mirror from the back it looks like a butt where it's thin. My gf's 10 year old daughter brought that to my attention.
 

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Mexican lattice is 20bucks
 
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I would have thought by now, someone would have found a cure for baldness. Not much hair left on the top of my head. I'm just letting nature take its course.
 
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[h=6]SKIN DEEP[/h][h=1]<nyt_headline version="1.0" type=" ">New Stratagems in the Quest for Hair</nyt_headline>[/h]<nyt_byline style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51); font-family: georgia, 'times new roman', times, serif; font-size: 10px; line-height: 15px;">[h=6]By DOUGLAS QUENQUA[/h]</nyt_byline>[h=6]Published: May 4, 2011[/h]
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<nyt_text><nyt_correction_top></nyt_correction_top>RICHARD PADUDA, an athletic man with a dark, spiky coiffure, does not look like your typical user of Latisse, the prescription eyelash-enhancing solution that has been endorsed by Brooke Shieldsand Claire Danes. That’s because he has used it not on his eyelashes, which are fairly lush, but on his hairline, which he noticed last year was beginning to recede.
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[h=6]Michael McElroy for The New York Times[/h]Richard Paduda liked how Latisse, an eyelash enhancer, thickened his hair, but he found the product too expensive.

[h=3]Related[/h]

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[h=6]Tony Cenicola/The New York Times[/h]
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[h=6]Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times[/h]Dr. Robert M. Bernstein believes hair will be cloned.


“I just put three or four drops on each side of my temple once a day,” said Mr. Paduda, 32, an insurance worker from Boca Raton, Fla. “The hair in that area, which was real thin and wispy — all those hairs got thick again, dark.”
Mr. Paduda is one of a growing number of men experimenting with Latisse as an antidote to encroachingbaldness. Made by Allergan, the drug has already won a following among women for helping them grow long, fluttery eyelashes. It was only a matter of time before it made the leap to denuded pates.
Indeed, dermatologists’ offices and Web forums for bald men (yes, they exist: baldtruthtalk.com) began buzzing with excitement over Latisse nearly the moment the Food and Drug Administration gave it the thumbs-up in December 2008.
“First question everyone was asking was, ‘Gosh, if it grows eyelashes, what is it going to do on the scalp?’ ” said Dr. Alan Bauman, the dermatologist and hair-restoration specialist who prescribed the drug to Mr. Paduda as part of an informal study.
While the F.D.A. has not approved Latisse as a hair-loss treatment — only two drugs have that designation: minoxidil (Rogaine, also a topical medication) and finasteride (Propecia, which is administered in pill form) — there are no laws preventing doctors from prescribing it for that purpose. Dr. Bauman said he has been prescribing a generic form of bimatoprost, the active ingredient in Latisse, to combat hair loss since 2007, and that it has worked for about 70 percent of his patients.
“What we found is that where patients were applying Latisse, especially in areas where the hair was thinner and wispier and less pigmented, the hair grew thicker, stronger and healthier,” he said.
Though some users of Latisse have experienced skin discoloration, Dr. Bauman said he had never seen any such reaction on the scalp of his patients.
Certainly, Mr. Paduda, who used Latisse daily from November through February, is a happy customer. By the third week, he said, both he and friends he asked for reactions were seeing results. “I even busted out the old ‘before’ and ‘after’ pictures,” he said. “It was a noticeable difference.”
But Latisse does not appear to be a silver bullet for hair loss. Instead, it appears to work in much the same way as Rogaine or Propecia: All three can strengthen and darken hair that grows from a dying follicle, but none can bring a dead one back to life. The result is an enhanced, refortified hairline rather than a brand new head of hair.
Aside from hair transplants, which can cost about $10,000 each and do not always look natural, the only current hope for complete replacement is hair cloning, the act of producing entirely new hair from the DNA of an existing one, which researchers have been attempting, unsuccessfully, for years.
A pair of researchers last year claimed to grow new hair by combining plucked hair with a wound-healing powder made by ACell, a regenerative-medicine company in Columbia, Md. Though the claim was met with some skepticism by other clinicians, the idea that ACell’s powder, which has been approved by the government, could facilitate new hair growth has breathed new life into the race to clone hair.
Dr. Robert M. Bernstein, clinical professor of dermatology at Columbia University, is now one of several researchers experimenting with the product.
“It’s just a question of time now” before hair cloning becomes a reality, Dr. Bernstein said. “We keep on moving back that time, but I think there’s absolutely no doubt that it’s going to be done.”
He believes hair cloning will be commercially available within 10 years. This may sound like a long time to wait, but “it’s important to remember that baldness is unlike other conditions where you can progress past the point of being helped,” Dr. Bernstein said. “Once we have a cure for hair loss, everyone will be able to benefit.”
It has been been 14 years since the F.D.A. approved a new hair-loss remedy (Propecia, in 1997), so it is understandable that anticipation for a new one might be running high. One advantage of Latisse is that it needs to be applied only once a day (Rogaine needs to be applied twice; Propecia is taken once daily), and does not seem to cause reactions in people who are allergic to minoxidil.
It is, however, expensive: a month’s supply of Latisse can cost up to $150, and that is in amounts appropriate for use merely on the eyelashes. Rogaine, which is also available over the counter now, costs about $25 a month, and a month’s supply of Propecia runs about $75. (Even Mr. Paduda has now switched to Propecia, citing cost.)
The potential for Latisse is not lost on Allergan. The company initiated a Phase 1 clinical study in August to determine whether bimatoprost can be used as a treatment in men and women suffering from hair loss (alopecia).
“There is a great deal of interest in developing other uses of bimatoprost,” Heather Katt, a spokeswoman for Allergan, wrote in an e-mail message, “and Allergan is exploring ways to pursue that pathway through the F.D.A. approval process.”
For those too impatient to wait, there is also the bold and fashionable solution of shaving one’s head.
But the fact is that many men — and women — simply do not accept baldness easily.
“Hair has been an evolutionary sign of health and sexuality and youth, and that doesn’t change,” Dr. Bernstein said. “Shaved heads look cool, but not everyone wants one, and not everyone looks good with one.”
Mr. Paduda concurs.
“I have really dark eyebrows,” he said. “I would look like a psycho if I shaved my head.”
 

FreeRyanFerguson.com
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I bought Nioxin hair treatment kit. Shampoo, conditioner, and a foam you put on after you shower. What the hell, I'll give it a try.
 

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