Propecia for Hair Loss
If you’re balding, you’re in good company.
Probably the most famous comb over in history was Julius
Caesar’s. Caesar combed his hair forward and wrapped
the rest of his head in a crown of laurels. He was betrayed
by his buddy Brutus. You don’t want age to betray
you.
Instead of a comb over and laurel leaves to crown your
bald pate, Propecia might be you way to keep your crown
crowned with hair. Propecia is the only orally taken
prescription drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
Hair Loss, Why It Happens
Julius’s patrician grandpa was probably also afflicted
with lost locks since male pattern baldness is hereditary.
If only they had known what scientists know now, perhaps
Caesar could have left the laurel leaves on the tree.
There are approximately 100,000 hairs on the head. Every
day around 100 hairs are lost, and 100 new hairs sprout.
This break-even process keeps us with a steady head of
hair. However, at around age 30 our hormones change.
The testosterone that perpetuated our full head of hair
has us growing hair in unsightly regions (like our ears)
and losing hair where it belongs (on our pate). The type
of testosterone is called DHT (dihydrotestosterone),
and Propecia is designed to keep it in check. If only
Caesar had Propecia, his name would be so ironic. The
name Caesar, from Latin “caesaries,” means “abundant
hair.”
Hair Loss Stopper: Propecia
The active ingredient in Propecia, Finasteride, reduces
our body’s production of DHT. Taken orally and
in a consistent manner hair loss can be stopped or
reversed by Propecia. Merck, the producer of Propecia,
says nine in 10 men respond to the drug. However, watch
out you Casanovas. Two percent of those who take Propecia
claim a drop in sex drive.
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