Predicting Finasteride sides based on handedness, from a new study.

Norwood One

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Since finasteride continues to be the gold standard in terms of treating hairloss (unfortunately), it's good that scientists are looking towards tests that can predict one's susceptibility to side effects. Will save a lot of people anxiety and hair if they can come up with a way to test if you will get side effects or not. Here's one about handedness that recently came out.

[h=3]Abstract[/h]Nowadays, finasteride is a relatively frequently prescribed drug in the therapeutic management of male androgenic alopecia. The reported adverse effects are notable in some patients, consisting in signs and symptoms that are encountered both during finasteride administration and after treatment cessation. Clinical and imagistic data show that cognition and sexuality are two distinct but interrelated environmental functions, most probable due to lateralization process of the brain. Specific for our topic, relatively recent published studies found that frequency and severity of finasteride adverse effects could be interrelated with hand preference and sexual orientation of the respective subjects. This paper tries to explain/support this interrelation through a psychophysiologic approach, to suggest how this premise could be further proved in dermatological practice, and to highlight its relevance in respect to therapeutic approach of male androgenic alopecia. As a possible therapeutic application, subjects having preference for a certain sexual orientation and/or predisposition for a given dominant hand could be advised before finasteride administration, that present an increased risk/sensitivity to develop adverse effects. Finally, even if finasteride and post-finasteride symptoms overlap to a large extent they should be, however, viewed as distinct physiopathologic entities, which could require perhaps different therapeutic approaches.


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27046152
 

Roberto_72

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Since finasteride continues to be the gold standard in terms of treating hairloss (unfortunately), it's good that scientists are looking towards tests that can predict one's susceptibility to side effects. Will save a lot of people anxiety and hair if they can come up with a way to test if you will get side effects or not. Here's one about handedness that recently came out.



https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27046152

also take a look at this about Finasteride side effect study:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25830296


Of 34 clinical trials, none had adequate safety reporting, 19 were partially adequate, 12 were inadequate, and 3 reported no adverse events. Funnel plots were asymmetric with a bias toward lower odds ratio for sexual adverse effects, suggesting systematic underdetection. No reports assessed adequacy of blinding, 18 (53%) disclosed conflicts of interest, and 19 (56%) received funding from the manufacturer. Duration of drug safety evaluation was 1 year or less for 26 of 34 trials (76%). Of 5704 men in the clinical data repository who were treated for Androgenetic Alopecia with finasteride, 1.25 mg/d or less, for Androgenetic Alopecia, only 31% met inclusion criteria for the pivotal trials referenced in the manufacturer's full prescribing information and 33% took finasteride for more than 1 year.
 

RatherGoBlindThanSeeItGo

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So right-handed straight guys are probably safe right? RIGHT??

There was a discussion about this on reddit. IIRC (I read the article) it said homosexual and right-handed men are most likely to develop sexual side effects, while heterosexual and left-handed men are more likely to suffer from mental sides like depression/brain fog.
 

big_head

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There was a discussion about this on reddit. IIRC (I read the article) it said homosexual and right-handed men are most likely to develop sexual side effects, while heterosexual and left-handed men are more likely to suffer from mental sides like depression/brain fog.

I like how each of those scenarios has a minority/majority element. So basically everyone is ****ed for all sides.
 

Afro_Vacancy

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That study was based off a very small sample size.
 
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