Doesn't make sense for nolva to regrow hair. In fact, it's biochemical mode of action in the body suggests that it would do the opposite if anything. I don't see how applying it topically would be much different.
most doctors i've spoken to says that the majority of the people who shed hair has gotten it from their mother's side. So incase the men on your mom's side has all got their hair left then you will most likely keep it
True in my case. My fathers side all have a full head of hair (even my grandpa before he checked out at 78), but I've got one uncle on my mothers side who went bald in his 30s, and it seems that's my destiny now too.
I'm fighting it with regaine, but it really sucks that I can't play with the strongest gear for fear of hair loss...
Ah damnit I'm behind the times... Oh well, at least I haven't lost hair YET Judging by my father though, it's only a matter of 2-3 years. He's already going to put me on propecia in a few months, age 24
My mother's dad had a full head of hair when he died. My dad's father was a cueball. I started losing mine at 22 and finally just shaved it all at 26. Lying bastards.
I thought that tamox inhibited TGFbeta1 which led to subsequent upregulation of AR. I would therefore think it might actually lead to hairloss if anything. TGFbeta1 is associated with scar tissue formation so I've used tamox in a topical to prevent scarring with relative success.
If I remember correctly, these mice were "programed" to be bald and also "programed" to respond to the Tamoxifen molecule. The goal wasn't to see if they could "cure bladness" with Tamoxifen, the goal was to demonstrate that they could trun a trait on/off with a engineered mechanism.