Obviously the new hairstyle suits him better! He looks younger and more energetic overall! So happy to see him satisfied! You did a really great job, thanks a lot for sharing! 👍😄👏
My husband keeps asking me why I watch these videos... He asked if I'm really into cutting hair 😂. Nah just like listening to this regal gentleman talk...😊❤
Finally a head I can relate to in terms of head shape, recession and style. The cut is nice and all but I'm wondering for some time now if I should just go short like Dan's hair or something because looking at this feels a bit like "trying to save something that's not 100% there anymore". I also tried the cut from "Straight Textured Fringe Haircut For Men | 2019 Hairstyle" once on myself too which was nice but it didn't last long and the wind wasn't my friend 😂😭.
I’ve taken Finasteride for a year and a month ago I got on Minoxidil. It might be placebo but I’ve noticed some difference in my hair thickness in just a month.
1 in 2? No, 90% of men will experiencing a form of hair loss. Roughly half of them won't go bald but will develop a mature hairline. I am 27 and have receded for about 2 cm in both corners. It's not really progressing further anymore but I've lost my juvenile hairline (which was very low set and very round) for sure, it looks now a bit more like Harry Styles's hairline
The answer to the question of whether a hair transplant might fall out is: If you A/ go to a very good doctor--spend the $$ and do it properly. B/ take care of your hair transplant C/ faithfully take Mixoxidil and Finasteride The vast majority of people will hang on to the hair that is transplanted. Plus in some cases, Min and Fin will not only help you keep your new hair, but will potentially grow a modest amount of additional hair. The other thing that is really important is a hair transplant is not one and done. Many people will have 3 or 4 over like a 10 year period, slowly filling out the volume, touching up the hairline, filling in new areas where male pattern baldness is ongoing etc. The benefit of doing over a longer period is virtually no one will notice what you've been doing. Hair transplants are, and have been for decades, the only way to get back a significant amount of lost hair. Nothing else comes remotely close.
It's really a matter of self acceptance, because at this point i don't see myself taking medication forever that won't solve anything permanently, will probably give me permanent side effects and as soon as i stop taking it i'll be going bald again, not worth it IMO. My life doesn't depend on it, i'm fine without it and i have to learn to be fine without a full head of hair lol. Niraj's haircut looks fantastic, what an improvement, Dan is amazing 👍
When I was 18 or so, I noticed that my hair had receded a bit around the temples and I was terrified that I was going to end up looking like Kojak by the age of 25. However, I am now 46 and as far as I can tell, there has been little or no progression with the recession. I still have a good head of hair. Why did the recession not progress?
I'm at the first 8 minutes and I totally agree with what gecsays about the genetics, my brother shows a great deal of hair loss. (We woman deal with hair loss too.)...Another key factor is, if someone has a low thyroid condition, hair loss is very common. I'm now at time 18:17 I concur that answer, my mom's side had thinning hair issues, but I think it came from her dad, since her didn't show thinning hair. My biological dad had general hair loss aschiscdad, but not so much his mom. Nice cut😊
One question I’ve never seen answered is using minoxidil for Telegon effluvium (aggressive hair shedding). Would the follicles come to rely on the minoxidil so even if you fix TE you have to continue using minoxidil to keep the hair? If so, wouldn’t using minoxidil for TE be a big mistake? No one’s ever answered it.
I'll make this very simple. No matter what 'condition' you have(even if you have no condition)......if you take minoxidil then the hairs that are produce by minoxidil are minoxidil dependent and you will need to be on minoxidil for life no matter what.
@@vlcheish yeah this doesn’t answer my question. The hair you lose from TE comes back once you fix the issue causing it, usually it’s related to nutritional deficiencies or stress. There’s a term called chronic TE, which is shedding over several years (which is what I have). Minoxidil is used to speed up the recovery process of TE by supplying blood flow to the follicles so you can get the nutrients they need to fix the issue, however it’s never mentioned whether you need to keep using minoxidil after you treat the TE.
What is your opinion of the castor oil craze claiming it helps with hair growth? I wish I could find a stylist so thorough and honest with there opinion. As a female, I'm experiencing hair thinning at 58. Would these products work for women?
I have such a problem talking while cutting, I can listen and ask questions like how’s your day? But anything I really need to think about I cant form a coherent sentence and cut at the same time, usually end up cutting my fingers. 😢 any advice please?
I can't talk and cut hair either, I have to concentrate on what I'm doing at the moment and most of the guys that are sitting in my chair are tuned out anyway, (resting). I've been cutting hair for 38 yrs.
What is the cream he used at last to style his hair? The one i have feels like too sticky and it's pulling my hair too hard when i try to work it in my hair
If you’re a guy worried about thinning hair or are embarrassed to admit it, it’s fine. You have many options these days whether it’s finasteride, minoxidil, hair transplant, etc. if you don’t want to lose your hair you don’t have to anymore.
ive been growing mine like 5 months want to get it in a man bun, i went barbers 2 weeks ago told him, he gave me a taper and took loads of weight off my hair with thiinning scissors, so pissed off, should of just told him to leave top, i still have length tho. will it grow out better and thicker?? and should i just leave cutting it all together
Is this guy actually using any medication? Because if he is I’m struggling to see what he’s using. Perhaps he’s not responding to medication? Either way, it’s very difficult to take hair loss advice from someone who doesn’t seem to be regaining any ground.
it blows my mind that so many men don’t know about finasteride. i started it the moment i saw increased shedding. haven’t lost any hair since. miracle drug.
So many guys are paranoid with the side effects. Only roughly 1% experience. And if you do, just stop taking it. I’ve been on finasteride since 26 and I’m 32 now. Never had issues with it.
As a guy with long hair, it amuses me to see folks paying for medication to grow their hair while simultaneously paying a guy to shave off the hair they've got 🤷🏼
@@Fred-zi6xp I can't see much he got disasterously wrong, but at the same time he's very obviously not a doctor lol. Here's a few things of the top of my head: The mechanism of action of minoxidil is not fully understood. While it is true that minoxidil increases blood supply, and this could well help hair growth, it is likely to be a minor contribution. Minoxidil probably works through increasing wnt signalling and through other mechanisms. it has even been shown to have an effect on DHT. Talking of DHT, no, "most" of the testosterone is not converted to DHT in susceptible individuals. Only about 10% of T is converted to DHT, no matter who you are. your sensitivity to hair loss depends on the number of androgen receptors in the hair follicles in relation to individual levels of scalp DHT. Microneedling twice a week? Too much, once a week is the most frequent I have seen recommended by doctors. You have to give the skin time to heal, so microneedling too frequently could cause more harm than good. Also, again, microneedling really doesn't work by increasing blood supply. It works by inducing the production of growth factors, increasing wnt signalling, and other mechanisms. Again, not fully understood. Hairs sit 1mm into the dermis? No they don't, they sit 4-5mm into the skin, in the adipose tissue BELOW the dermis, although miniaturising hair follicles to move up through the dermis. In any event, microneedling is aimed at the hair *stem cells*, which do sit 1-2mm below the surface of the skin.
I think everyone could benefit from that Q&A. Everyone needs to be taught about potential hair loss early on. I have a sister that deals with Alopecia. I suppose that's another while "ballgame." Thanks, Dan! Cat
Excellent video Dan, thanks for sharing this conversation with the client - it really clears up a lot of misconceptions and explains how treatments work. Cheers!
unless you talk about the reasons for hairloss you're not an expert, you've not mentioned the lymph nodes, over toxicity within the body which causes the backed up lymph which causes you to lose hair as your body needs it's resources to fight real threats to it's main organs, so the first thing on the chopping board is, hair, skin, nails. You're just band-aiding it whilst contributing to worse health (mino/fina) and not addressing the overall cause dan.
^^^bro science post MBP is caused by hair follicle sensitivity to androgens as explain by this video. This is why castratos historically did not lose their hair as they never produced the necessary androgens to trigger the hair miniaturization process(tough to produce DHT when someone has castration before puberty).
@@vlcheishresponded but it didnt go through.. not all hairloss is MPB dude lol.. also MBP can be reversed without minoxidil/fina which was the purpose of the comment the information you provided for castratos isn't accurate because some did lose hair in ways that are classically associated with MPB.. so there are other factors that play a role, which is what I mentioned above. You should take a course on human health from a qualified naturopath which was the standard model of medicine before the rockerfeller funded flexner report of the early 1900's you really don't know what you're talking about and you're just repeating what other people have told you cconventional wisdom in the 20th century would have us believe that illness (hair loss is illness) and disease are external pathogens of which the patient is unlucky to have been effected by, the responsibility is removed from the patient and thus they are placed into the waiting hands of the medical establishment, the same medical establishment that has been teaching a singular model of medicine since the 1920s you really don't know your history bud
@@TheVeganFinalBossthis sounds interesting. I'm not sure if you are completely insane or a genius. Where can I learn more about this stuff? Also what does naturopathy propose as the remedy to lymph node issues mentioned above?