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Tical: You are correct.
"for the majority of people that use it, it slows hairloss down and in some cases stops it completely... "
Propecia slows loss of hair to a very small extent. Without undergoing a hair transplant there's not much use of having Propecia. If you are bound to be bald in a matter of months, Propecia will merely slow hair loss down by a few weeks. Propecia won't grow back the hair past the temples, it'll only thicken the roots of what hair remains. Side effects? I've felt none.
"but anything you lost up to that point especially around the hairline & temples wont come back"
Propecia is given to clients scheduled to have hair transplants. At the consultation you are given Propecia months before the date of surgery.
Propecia's primary use is to thicken the hair line at the back of your skull. This is where the doctor will make an incision to then extract a long strip of your hair line. Your hair line is then harvested under microscopes and these thousands of micro sized grafts from your hair line are planted in areas of baldness.
After a hair transplant, the use of Propecia is mandatory to sustain thickness from the temples back. You then drop/spray Minoxidil 5% to rejuvenate new hair cells to ascend from beneath your scalp. Propecia adds strength to any of these new hair cells coming up.
As with any hair implanted to the front hairline and temple area. Minoxidil 5% cover this problem. Since the hair implanted in your hair line front region was used from the back of your skull, the new hair at the front hair line will be really thick.
Propecia and Minoxidil 5% work in harmony and they depend on one another.
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