Revita vs Nizoral

losing_it_all

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I was wondering if anyone has used Revita shampoo? I'm very surprised that this website does not cover it much while other websites spend a lot of time on it. I'm currently a Nizoral user but was wondering if anyone here has had success with Revita. It has the following active ingredients which seem quite good - Ketoconazole, supplemented with Procyanidins, Copper Peptides, Spin Traps, Amino Acids, Rooibos, MSM, Caffeine, Carnitine Tartrate and Biotin.

Therefore it has the same active ingredients that Nizoral has (1% Ketoconazole) and Tricomin (copper peptides) use.

Here is the product review that convinced me:
http://www.regrowshair.com/non-surgical- ... hair-loss/

Anyone have any thoughts on this?
 

Hammer87

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You're likely to see some negative reviews, but many of these will relate to when the product first came out, the formula's been changed since then.

So the best advice I can give you is try it and see.

+Lasts ages
+Reduces hairs shed
+Hair feels good after using
+Hair 'feels' healthier (Psychological?)
+Hair has been maintained for the last few months using Revita alone
+Some users have reported their hair has become noticeable better.

Cons

-I'm not sure a shampoo can stimulate hair growth
-Expensive compared to other shampoos (But lasts a while)
-You may shed a bit for the first one or two washes

But in my opinion, using Revita is the best thing I could have done at this stage.
 

$tackz

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Revita doesn't have the same copper peptides as Tricomin in it.

Personally I don't see any reason to use it over Nizoral. There's not enough success stories to prove otherwise.
 

Hammer87

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$tackz said:
Personally I don't see any reason to use it over Nizoral. There's not enough success stories to prove otherwise.

One thing I can guarantee is it will leave your hair feeling completely different from nizoral. Not dry, irritated scalp and straw like. But nice and soft - There's no need to use a conditioner with it.
 

losing_it_all

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$tackz said:
Revita doesn't have the same copper peptides as Tricomin in it.

Personally I don't see any reason to use it over Nizoral. There's not enough success stories to prove otherwise.


What is the difference between Revita's copper peptides and that of Tricomin? Also it has the same active ingredient as Nizoral so don't you think its worth using considering it also provides other important ingredients?

Also where does everyone buy it from? Any particular website?
 

squeegee

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Nizoral all the way. Cheaper. got the good stuff in it.
 

savalous

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I would have to agree with hammer87, frankly im surprised this product hasnt gained more tracktion. if used as directed it actually does seem to work? it does leave your soft and your scalp feeling nice! the only downside is the price but it is what it is.
 

Hammer87

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In UK?

I used Mankind - search google.co.uk, it came quite quickly.

There are pretty of sites that sell it, all for a similar price.
 

decro435

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I really like this stuff too , but my inflammation has not subsided while using it , hasn't got the same effect as 2% Nizoral. Though I have quite bad inflammation. For most people I reccomend this fully , leaves your hair feeling great.
 

ali777

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If DS Laboratories had proof that Revita works they would be milking it. However, I still like it and I use it almost everyday.

I used 2 bottles in just under 6 months. Even with regular use one bottle should last 2-3 months.

Nizoral isn't necessarily cheaper. According to Boots website 100gr nizoral is about £10, I pay £15 for 180gr of Revita.
 

JohnC43

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ali777 said:
If DS Laboratories had proof that Revita works they would be milking it. However, I still like it and I use it almost everyday.

I used 2 bottles in just under 6 months. Even with regular use one bottle should last 2-3 months.

Nizoral isn't necessarily cheaper. According to Boots website 100gr nizoral is about £10, I pay £15 for 180gr of Revita.
Do they have the same important ingredients, if not what does nizoral have that is better?
 

Grantspots

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ali777 said:
If DS Laboratories had proof that Revita works

"works" to do what? Are they making hair growth claims or are they simply saying they've made a better nizoral? If the latter, then as long as it genuinely contains Ketoconazole, it will "work". Although I am not too sure I understand the point of reducing inflammation and then putting caffeine in it, which just increases it ...

My biggest concern would be verifying that it really contains 1% ketoconazole. Anyone can say they put anything in a product. You have no idea if its really in there.

-G-
 

JohnC43

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Grantspots said:
ali777 said:
If DS Laboratories had proof that Revita works

"works" to do what? Are they making hair growth claims or are they simply saying they've made a better nizoral? If the latter, then as long as it genuinely contains Ketoconazole, it will "work". Although I am not too sure I understand the point of reducing inflammation and then putting caffeine in it, which just increases it ...

My biggest concern would be verifying that it really contains 1% ketoconazole. Anyone can say they put anything in a product. You have no idea if its really in there.

-G-

Caffeine causes inflamation? So wouldn't that make Revita counterintuitive to the benefits of keta?
 

ali777

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Grantspots said:
ali777 said:
If DS Laboratories had proof that Revita works

"works" to do what? Are they making hair growth claims or are they simply saying they've made a better nizoral? If the latter, then as long as it genuinely contains Ketoconazole, it will "work". Although I am not too sure I understand the point of reducing inflammation and then putting caffeine in it, which just increases it ...

My biggest concern would be verifying that it really contains 1% ketoconazole. Anyone can say they put anything in a product. You have no idea if its really in there.

-G-

From the booklet that comes with Revita (DS Laboratories website states the same claims): "The most efficient hair growth stimulating shampoo available in the market", "Stimulating new hair growth"...

Then they go on and talk about the benefits of each individual component quoting a few studies along the way. The booklet doesn't mention how Revita was tested, or how effective it is. It only says that it's the most efficient shampoo in the market...

I stand by what I said... Revita claims to be the most efficient hair growth stimulating shampoo, but they have no proof that it works in the way they claim it does. If Revita was a mainstream shampoo, the competitors would make sure DS Labs either back their claims up or withdraw them completely. I personally can't see revita being sold in European chains for legal reasons. It will be a small time shampoo talked in the hair forums like this and bought on personal recommendations.

Also, the law in Europe requires the companies to list all the ingredients in a product. They can't put whatever they want in there... Obviously to protect the intellectual property, the ratio of the ingredients is not given.

JohnC43 said:
Caffeine causes inflamation? So wouldn't that make Revita counterintuitive to the benefits of keta?

If you read the forums, you'll see that the "first generation" revita was a complete failure. Most users reported increased shed which didn't subside as it's supposed to. DS Labs changed the formula some time ago, and the new formula seems to be better.
 
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