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Hair Restoration Research Forum
Hair Loss Drugs
Propecia stopped working after about 8 years|
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Real Hair Club Member |
I've been taking Propecia (1 mg daily) for about 7 or 8 years. I started losing my hair behind the hairline and further back around the age of 23-24. It was thinning drastically. Got on Propecia and after about 1 year I had significant regrowth and thickening back up of my hair. Recently i am thinning again (I'm now 32) and at times feel I am getting back to as bad or worse than I was before. I am considering adding Rogaine to the regimen and already added Saw Palmetto (figured couldn't hurt). I am going to go back to my derm and discuss options. Guess I should be happy for the 7-8 years I got on Propecia, but no one ever said "Oh by the way, it will stop working or lose its effectiveness after some period of years and you will be back to where you were years ago but have dumped this drug in your system the whole time." Who knows would I have even started? Anyway, any thoughts would be appreciated.
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Veteran Real Hair Club Member |
Try minoxidil and switch for Avodart if you have no side effects with Propecia
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http://www.hairtransplantnetwork.com/blog/home-page.asp?WebID=785 Veteran Real Hair Club Member |
I've been on Propecia for 10 years. At that time my vertex was just beginning to thin out a little.
My hairline had been receding 15 years before I started Propecia. My vertex hairloss has been minimal over the last ten years (since Propecia). My hairline gradually continued to recede over the last 10 years from a NW 3 to a NW 4. For me, Propecia has helped my vertex considerably. It has helped slow my receding hairline minimally (at best). Changes in effectiveness with Propecia over time? I dunno. I'd be interested to see what others have to say. Good luck! ---------------------- Dr. Bernstein 1703 FUT on May 12, 20008 ---------------------- |
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Veteran Real Hair Club Member |
A respected HT surgeon posted this here and it makes sense: for your first 7-8 years, you got hair growth from Propecia (in addition to hair loss prevention). So you were on the 'up curve'. Now, re-growth has stopped and you are seeing thinning again. So you are on the 'down curve'. If you stop Propecia, that down curve would become a downward slide. So what do you do - keep taking it. And maybe at 35, you can consider a HT. |
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Real Hair Club Member |
Thanks for the thoughts everyone. I would like to try Advodart as I had very little side effects from Propecia. However, being that I live in the US, Advodart (DUT) is still not approved for hair loss, so I don't think my derm would give me that. I will go talk to her and see what she says. Yes, I will consider a HT in the near future. Also any more thoughts on Minox? Is it worth it to add at this point? What really sucks is that if I was balding in the crown or from the front to back I might be able to live with it. It sucks to have a strong hairline, but this patch of thinning behind it. Looks like a damn hole there in the center of my hair.
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Real Hair Club Member |
Thanks HT55, thinking of adding Rogaine Foam as well to give it a shot. Might get more growth again for a few years.
Curious_George - the "curve" theory you posted is interesting. I guess because I 1) started taking Propecia young when the thinning only started 2) had very little side efects 3) had really good results for many years I thought I might have halted the process and it would stay that way if I stayed on the drug religiously. But our bodies do adapt very well to stuff including drugs and I find it possible that my body has gotten used to/adapted past its effectiveness. One point I was thinking of though was the fact that if I understand Hair Loss correctly it is caused by the DHT in the scalp killing/choking the hairs. DHT is a product of the body converting testosterone. You would think that if the drug worked all through my 20's and into my early 30's, then it would continue working as it was or have an easier time working as testosterone decreases past 30 in men. It would seem to me the drug would have less DHT conversion to block and therefore work as good or better. Just my own incoherent thoughts.. :0) |
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Hard Core Real Hair Club Member |
I had 7 really good years on Propecia and then things changed. It sucks because I also thought I had pretty much stopped it.
Now three years later I have moved from a NW2 to closing in on a NW4. Still taking Propecia, but definitely not the same result. |
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Hard Core Real Hair Club Member |
One point I was thinking of though was the fact that if I understand Hair Loss correctly it is caused by the DHT in the scalp killing/choking the hairs. DHT is a product of the body converting testosterone. You would think that if the drug worked all through my 20's and into my early 30's, then it would continue working as it was or have an easier time working as testosterone decreases past 30 in men. It would seem to me the drug would have less DHT conversion to block and therefore work as good or better. Just my own incoherent thoughts.. :0)[/QUOTE]
Yeh Kal the deeper mysteries of Hairloss eh? What your saying makes sense ,you would think that if you made it through the early high testosterone days then it should be fairly maintainable any Hairloss. Go figure?. |
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Hair Restoration Research Forum
Hair Loss Drugs
Propecia stopped working after about 8 years
