A microRNA hits baldness hard: 90% regrowth
A new approach to hair regrowth could make current treatments obsolete. The key? A microRNA that wakes up follicles.
A new approach to hair regrowth could make current treatments obsolete. The key? A microRNA that wakes up follicles.
A new baldness remedy based on a microneedle patch brings what your hair needs right where it is needed.
Baldness, an ugly beast that can affect up to 85% of men after the age of 50. Until now. Today a remedy promises to cure her. Forever.
It works great in the early stages of baldness (when the alopecia is still patchy). No curls for someone who has been a pool ball for years.
Machine learning helps researchers identify the best nanozymes to regenerate hair follicles - a decisive step forward.
Scientific efforts aim to make aging a disease, and they have never been closer to an outcome. However, many would not like a world with (many) fewer deaths.
A new alopecia drug shows impressive results. Here are the updates from phase three of the trial
The startups' idea is to take ordinary cells from patients, such as skin cells, and turn them into hair-forming cells.
Many ways against hair loss, few definitive solutions. But this seems like a good way: mRNA for hair regrowth.
Research created to understand the phenomenon of gray hair has led to a new paradigm on stem cells. It could give us the cure for aging.
That immense, gigantic genius that was Nikola Tesla built a tower, the Wardenclyffe Tower, in the middle of Long Island: an installation, he said, capable of transmitting electricity without the need for wires. The project (with the associated mysterious fire) foundered among a thousand mysteries even though Tesla had already transmitted remote energy in other experiments, and since then the project was shelved. More than a century later it's still a big hunt: big companies (Toyota, Intel, Samsung, Foxconn) and small startups (WiTricity, ProxybyPower) have... Read more