Buy Propecia and stop further hair loss
Whenever anything goes wrong with the children, we all want to blame the parents. See an out-of-control teen and the instinctive responses all kick in. Broken marriage, broken children. While there may be some justice in this when it comes to behavior, it’s less fair when scientists start announcing genetic causes for how children turn out. Take obesity as an example. How or why some people end up carrying more weight than others is not simply down to the genes they inherit from their parents. At some point, children have to take responsibility for themselves. They are the ones taking the day-to-day decisions on how to live their lives.
The latest “official” statistics on male pattern baldness claim it affects two-thirds of all men. In reality, all men slowly lose their hair as they age. Come the time to enter the ranks of the retired, the hairline will have receded and scalp will be showing through the thin wisps on top. As that ancient Brit, King Canute, discovered, you can sit on the beach at low tide but, no matter how much you command the sea not to come back in, it will. Biology is fixed by the clock. Hair thins and drops out. So why do some younger men lose their hair before the usual time?
Well, here come those pesky genes, specifically one or two on the X chromosome regulating how men react to the different versions of testosterone floating around in the bloodstream. Really, it’s all the fault of dihydrotestosterone. All men produce it but, if you have the wrong genes, this will trigger early hair loss. Did you know you get your X chromosome from your mother? She has two: one from her paternal grandmother and one from her mother. So if your your maternal grandfather had male pattern baldness, you are doomed. An exaggeration, of course, because many different genes contribute, deciding whether you will go completely bald or only lose enough hair to form that magic M. There are also environmental factors. Your hair loss can be accelerated by high stress, and by the presence of diabetes or heart disease. Diabetes in particular is significant because it affects the amount of testosterone in the blood.
Given all this science, it’s a relief to know we now have Propecia to help us out. So let’s be clear about its limitations. Propecia is a wonderful drug that really does stop hair loss and encourage some regrowth. But it has absolutely no effect on your genes, cannot do anything to help prevent or treat diabetes, and is powerless in the face of a stroke or heart attack. All that’s for you to deal with as best you can. Lifestyle changes can help. If you prefer positive action, Propecia prevents the natural process of testosterone turning into dihydrotestosterone so, no matter what you genes were programmed to do, your hair will not be affected. For those who decide to go with the flow (as nature intended), you can draw comfort from the latest studies showing more people think bald men are older, more distinguished and wiser than younger men with hair. They are not pretending to be something they are not. Of course, not all studies give truthful results.
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