michael barry
Senior Member
- Reaction score
- 14
Bryan,
You mention that you favor Whiting's "genetic clock" theory.................
Im kind of developing a different idea in my mind based on some of studies Doctor posted and some Ive read in the past.
Fact: We know alpha five reductase gets more active as men age. I dont know if this means more alpha five reductase enzymes are made, they get better at what they do, they are more chemically stable, etc. However, what I do know is that men's body hair gets hairier and hairier, leading many men to have really "peak" body hair in their forties and fifties, when many men with "good" hair, start to see bald spots and recession.
Fact: We see in other androgen related disorders (like the studies Ive posted), that androgen receptor expression is heightened and we also have the repeat mutations in androgen receptors that Doctor has generously detailed for us.
Fact: Head hair needs no male hormone and grows well without any of it.
My idea: Male hormone isn't necessary for head hair, and your head hair can deal with some androgenic transcription up to a point, but as alpha five increases with age and androgen receptor expression might also increase with age "up there", there gets to be more than what head hair "can handle" and it starts growing more weakly and apoptosis begins, the collagen deposition around the hairs begin, immuno events might occur, etc. IMPORTANT: Im not saying some men's hair isn't more "resiliant" against androgens than others.........
BUT, what I am saying is that there may be no "genetic clock" within cells "somewhere" in the philosebaceous unit that tell the dermal papilla cells "at age 39, you will begin to have a bad response (or cough, if you will) when you uptake DHT through a receptor site).
Lemme, Bryan, base this on a couple of observations. Ive shown people with 4 pics and a study of 13 women, that women basically have male pattern baldness just like men do, but dont have the hormones to kick it off. But they go bald just like a man does if you give them testosterone if their family genetics dictate that.
When I look at men who have full heads of hair Bryan................no recession in their mid-thirties and forties...........................Their hair still greys sooner, is more brittle, and has an "aged"-look as opposed to females of the same age. The only men Ive noticed whose hair is practically "the same" as females are young hispanics in their twenties still. They have hair that is so thick and the follicles so large that it could pass for a woman's hair pretty easily. But Ive noticed as they age............even with no recession, many get a little thin in the vertex and the "look" of the hair gets dryer, more brittle, and more grey while the dark women's just doesn't change (until they get post-menaupausal).
I think we are going to find that its the volume of androgen uptake that makes us bald more than anything.......................which is a "mix" of how active your alpha five reductase enyzme in the root sheath is, and how much androgen receptor expression that you have (and possibly this might be effected to a small extent by having more of the other androgens than normal in the scalp area also through low globulin, alot of type 1 DHT also).
Thats my own little guess anyway.
I suppose I could use body hair to relate this in another way. We konw that a "smooth man" (Brad Pitt) can have every bit as much serum DHT and T than a "hairy man" (Steve Carrell----have you ever seen his chest? A forrest), but why does Steve Carrell have chest hair like an ape and Brad Pitt have almost none? My guess is that Steve's androgen receptors on those hairs just perform better and the alpha five reductase enzymes near those chest hairs just are better at making more DHT from available testosterone. We KNOW that most all DHT gets bound by globulin when it gets out into the body right? Its the only thing that really makes sense, as the vellus hairs on Brad Pitt's body surely have the same "male body hair" general genetic make-up as any other guy. Pitt strikes me as a fairly "manly" dude with normal testosterone levels, so why isn't his chest a forrest like Carrell's or well,.............mine?
There you folks have my own little hairloss theory. Feel free to make as much fun of it as you want : )
You mention that you favor Whiting's "genetic clock" theory.................
Im kind of developing a different idea in my mind based on some of studies Doctor posted and some Ive read in the past.
Fact: We know alpha five reductase gets more active as men age. I dont know if this means more alpha five reductase enzymes are made, they get better at what they do, they are more chemically stable, etc. However, what I do know is that men's body hair gets hairier and hairier, leading many men to have really "peak" body hair in their forties and fifties, when many men with "good" hair, start to see bald spots and recession.
Fact: We see in other androgen related disorders (like the studies Ive posted), that androgen receptor expression is heightened and we also have the repeat mutations in androgen receptors that Doctor has generously detailed for us.
Fact: Head hair needs no male hormone and grows well without any of it.
My idea: Male hormone isn't necessary for head hair, and your head hair can deal with some androgenic transcription up to a point, but as alpha five increases with age and androgen receptor expression might also increase with age "up there", there gets to be more than what head hair "can handle" and it starts growing more weakly and apoptosis begins, the collagen deposition around the hairs begin, immuno events might occur, etc. IMPORTANT: Im not saying some men's hair isn't more "resiliant" against androgens than others.........
BUT, what I am saying is that there may be no "genetic clock" within cells "somewhere" in the philosebaceous unit that tell the dermal papilla cells "at age 39, you will begin to have a bad response (or cough, if you will) when you uptake DHT through a receptor site).
Lemme, Bryan, base this on a couple of observations. Ive shown people with 4 pics and a study of 13 women, that women basically have male pattern baldness just like men do, but dont have the hormones to kick it off. But they go bald just like a man does if you give them testosterone if their family genetics dictate that.
When I look at men who have full heads of hair Bryan................no recession in their mid-thirties and forties...........................Their hair still greys sooner, is more brittle, and has an "aged"-look as opposed to females of the same age. The only men Ive noticed whose hair is practically "the same" as females are young hispanics in their twenties still. They have hair that is so thick and the follicles so large that it could pass for a woman's hair pretty easily. But Ive noticed as they age............even with no recession, many get a little thin in the vertex and the "look" of the hair gets dryer, more brittle, and more grey while the dark women's just doesn't change (until they get post-menaupausal).
I think we are going to find that its the volume of androgen uptake that makes us bald more than anything.......................which is a "mix" of how active your alpha five reductase enyzme in the root sheath is, and how much androgen receptor expression that you have (and possibly this might be effected to a small extent by having more of the other androgens than normal in the scalp area also through low globulin, alot of type 1 DHT also).
Thats my own little guess anyway.
I suppose I could use body hair to relate this in another way. We konw that a "smooth man" (Brad Pitt) can have every bit as much serum DHT and T than a "hairy man" (Steve Carrell----have you ever seen his chest? A forrest), but why does Steve Carrell have chest hair like an ape and Brad Pitt have almost none? My guess is that Steve's androgen receptors on those hairs just perform better and the alpha five reductase enzymes near those chest hairs just are better at making more DHT from available testosterone. We KNOW that most all DHT gets bound by globulin when it gets out into the body right? Its the only thing that really makes sense, as the vellus hairs on Brad Pitt's body surely have the same "male body hair" general genetic make-up as any other guy. Pitt strikes me as a fairly "manly" dude with normal testosterone levels, so why isn't his chest a forrest like Carrell's or well,.............mine?
There you folks have my own little hairloss theory. Feel free to make as much fun of it as you want : )