HOW TO INCREASE YOUR MINOXIDIL EFFICIENCY AND RESULTS (new method)

Gaygymmaxx

Gaygymmaxx

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all you have to do, is put stevia in your minoxidil solution, that's right.

Here are some notes from the study

How it works
  • Improved solubility:
    Stevioside's chemical structure allows it to form micelle-like structures that can encapsulate the poorly water-soluble minoxidil, making it more soluble and easier to deliver.

  • Enhanced skin delivery:
    The stevioside-minoxidil mixture was delivered to the skin via a microneedle patch that dissolved into the skin. This process created tiny pathways for the drug to enter the skin and reach hair follicles more effectively.
Study results
  • Increased hair growth:
    In a 35-day mouse study, the stevioside-minoxidil patch resulted in hair regrowth in over 67% of the treatment area.

  • Improved follicle activity:
    The treatment successfully nudged hair follicles into the growth phase, as indicated by darker, more active follicles.

  • Comparison to standard minoxidil:
    The patch significantly outperformed standard minoxidil, which only showed about 25% hair regrowth in the same study group.
Important considerations
  • Early research:
    The study was conducted on mice, and more research is needed to determine if these results will translate to humans.

  • Not for home use:
    The stevia compound is not for direct application to the scalp; it was used as part of a complex microneedle patch formulation.
    Potential benefits:
    If successful in humans, this could lead to more efficient and potentially safer hair loss treatments with a more targeted delivery syste

    We need some org guinea pigs to run this method



 
  • +1
  • Woah
Reactions: gxnesis, GoblinMaxxer, vevcred and 4 others
@Mogsgymmaxx your unc is balding saar :feelswah: Don't be like me, use minoxidil every day since birth just in case
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: iblamexyz, qxdr and Mogs Me
all you have to do, is put stevia in your minoxidil solution, that's right.

Here are some notes from the study

How it works
  • Improved solubility:
    Stevioside's chemical structure allows it to form micelle-like structures that can encapsulate the poorly water-soluble minoxidil, making it more soluble and easier to deliver.

  • Enhanced skin delivery:
    The stevioside-minoxidil mixture was delivered to the skin via a microneedle patch that dissolved into the skin. This process created tiny pathways for the drug to enter the skin and reach hair follicles more effectively.
Study results
  • Increased hair growth:
    In a 35-day mouse study, the stevioside-minoxidil patch resulted in hair regrowth in over 67% of the treatment area.

  • Improved follicle activity:
    The treatment successfully nudged hair follicles into the growth phase, as indicated by darker, more active follicles.

  • Comparison to standard minoxidil:
    The patch significantly outperformed standard minoxidil, which only showed about 25% hair regrowth in the same study group.
Important considerations
  • Early research:
    The study was conducted on mice, and more research is needed to determine if these results will translate to humans.

  • Not for home use:
    The stevia compound is not for direct application to the scalp; it was used as part of a complex microneedle patch formulation.
    Potential benefits:
    If successful in humans, this could lead to more efficient and potentially safer hair loss treatments with a more targeted delivery syste

    We need some org guinea pigs to run this method


do you think manoxadilldo is okay to use at 14?
 
  • JFL
  • +1
Reactions: Deleted member 230985, iblamexyz and Gaygymmaxx
@Mogsgymmaxx your unc is balding saar :feelswah: Don't be like me, use minoxidil every day since birth just in case

I’m gonna hop on dut instead :bigbrain:
 
  • JFL
  • +1
Reactions: iblamexyz and Gaygymmaxx
@Mogsgymmaxx wtf is this word :dafuckfeels:

This nigga lives in the future


IMG 2786
 
  • +1
Reactions: iblamexyz
all you have to do, is put stevia in your minoxidil solution, that's right.

Here are some notes from the study

How it works
  • Improved solubility:
    Stevioside's chemical structure allows it to form micelle-like structures that can encapsulate the poorly water-soluble minoxidil, making it more soluble and easier to deliver.

  • Enhanced skin delivery:
    The stevioside-minoxidil mixture was delivered to the skin via a microneedle patch that dissolved into the skin. This process created tiny pathways for the drug to enter the skin and reach hair follicles more effectively.
Study results
  • Increased hair growth:
    In a 35-day mouse study, the stevioside-minoxidil patch resulted in hair regrowth in over 67% of the treatment area.

  • Improved follicle activity:
    The treatment successfully nudged hair follicles into the growth phase, as indicated by darker, more active follicles.

  • Comparison to standard minoxidil:
    The patch significantly outperformed standard minoxidil, which only showed about 25% hair regrowth in the same study group.
Important considerations
  • Early research:
    The study was conducted on mice, and more research is needed to determine if these results will translate to humans.

  • Not for home use:
    The stevia compound is not for direct application to the scalp; it was used as part of a complex microneedle patch formulation.
    Potential benefits:
    If successful in humans, this could lead to more efficient and potentially safer hair loss treatments with a more targeted delivery syste

    We need some org guinea pigs to run this method



bump
 
all you have to do, is put stevia in your minoxidil solution, that's right.

Here are some notes from the study

How it works
  • Improved solubility:
    Stevioside's chemical structure allows it to form micelle-like structures that can encapsulate the poorly water-soluble minoxidil, making it more soluble and easier to deliver.

  • Enhanced skin delivery:
    The stevioside-minoxidil mixture was delivered to the skin via a microneedle patch that dissolved into the skin. This process created tiny pathways for the drug to enter the skin and reach hair follicles more effectively.
Study results
  • Increased hair growth:
    In a 35-day mouse study, the stevioside-minoxidil patch resulted in hair regrowth in over 67% of the treatment area.

  • Improved follicle activity:
    The treatment successfully nudged hair follicles into the growth phase, as indicated by darker, more active follicles.

  • Comparison to standard minoxidil:
    The patch significantly outperformed standard minoxidil, which only showed about 25% hair regrowth in the same study group.
Important considerations
  • Early research:
    The study was conducted on mice, and more research is needed to determine if these results will translate to humans.

  • Not for home use:
    The stevia compound is not for direct application to the scalp; it was used as part of a complex microneedle patch formulation.
    Potential benefits:
    If successful in humans, this could lead to more efficient and potentially safer hair loss treatments with a more targeted delivery syste

    We need some org guinea pigs to run this method


Topical as well? if so, would it help with lashes?
 

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