Bald head of young man on a white background

New hair-raising technique to decrease baldness

A Japanese scientist regrows hair follicles at record rate using a special ingredient – this novel technique could revolutionize the treatment of baldness. [This article first appeared on the website LongevityFacts.com. Author: Brady Hartman. ]

While scientists aim to lengthen our lifespans, at least they can lengthen our locks.

Or even grow a full head of hair on a bald pate, in the near future.

How the Hair-Raising Science Works

Bald heads may soon be a thing of the past, thanks to a Japanese scientist named Fukuda who has developed a way to grow hair follicles at a record rate.

Our follicles grow from cells called hair follicle germs. These germs develop into hair follicles, the tiny organs that produce and nourish our hair.

A team led by professor Junji Fukuda of the Yokohama National University (YNU), cultivated 5,000 of these follicle germs within just a few days, enough to replenish a head of hair. Professor Fukuda’s method is a massive step up from existing techniques that can create only 50 follicle germs at once.

Vessel for preparing hair follicle germs
A vessel for preparing hair follicle germs. Credit: Yokohama National University

Special Ingredient

The special ingredient is a type of silicone used in his study called dimethylpolysiloxane. The scientists used two kinds of cells placed in silicone containers to cultivate the hair follicle germs. The team published their results in the journal Biomaterials.

Medications can slow hair loss, but they do not reverse the problem, says Fukuda. The novel technology is an improvement over existing methods of hair restoration which merely rob Peter to pay Paul, as Fukuda points out

“Beauty clinics currently often use hair from the occipital region [back of the head] and plant them to frontal areas with hair loss. A problem with this is that it doesn’t increase the total volume of hair.”

Hairs have grown on the back of a mouse.
Fukuda generated hairs on the back of a mouse. Credit: Yokohama National University

Hair Club for Mice

Fukuda’s method has been tested in mice so far and works wonders for the rodents. While human tests might not occur for another five years, scientists ultimately believe the technique could be used to generate a fresh head of hair.

Professor Fukuda adds that treatments using his new technique may be available in 10 years.

Related: Why We Go Bald

In a study published at the end of January, a scientist gets to the roots of hair loss and says that baldness is due to free radical damage and the metabolic changes of aging. The researcher then suggests ways to solve the problem.

Article link: Do no go baldly into that good night.

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References

Cover photo credit: Getty Images(iStock).

“To baldly grow: Japan scientists regrow hair at record rate.”  MedicalXpress. February 6, 2018. Link to press release.

Tatsuto Kageyama et al. “Spontaneous hair follicle germ (HFG) formation in vitro, enabling the large-scale production of HFGs for regenerative medicine.” Biomaterials (2017). DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2017.10.056. February 6, 2018. Link to article in ScienceDirect.

Disclaimer

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