Natural Hair Loss Product Proven in
Clinical Trials
by David L. Kern
A drug-free hair loss product, from a surprising
source, may be the new answer to thinning hair, alopecia, and male
pattern baldness...
"You have no idea what it's like,"
says Joe Rice, a 60-year-old professional from Fort Wayne, Indiana. "I started
losing my hair in my twenties. It's miserable. It has a way of shaping your
whole life."
Joe's worn a toupee for years. No one sees him without it, not even his closest
friends. He's tried "just about everything" to stop hair loss, including Rogaine
and Propecia, without success. But deep down, he still holds out hope.
"I know the drugs work for some people, but they didn't work for me," he sighs.
"Just show me one new hair, and I'm a customer for life."
A Serious Problem
Joe is not alone. Millions of men
and women suffer in silence from alopecia, baldness and thinning hair. And while
hair loss isn't fatal, it is a serious condition with profound psychological
effects. For many, hair loss brings feelings of shame, despair, and crippled
self-esteem.
New Hope from the Orient
Since 1999, a group of scientists in
Japan, led by researcher T. Takahashi, has been studying botanical extracts
looking for a safe, effective solution for hair growth. After testing over a
thousand different extracts, they found three promising natural chemicals. One
was from barley. One from Chardonnay grapes. And one- by far the most potent-
was an extract from ordinary apples.
Move Over Minoxidil
One year later, the scientists
announced even more striking findings to the international community. They
compared the apple extract, known as procyanidin B-2, to the proven hair growth
drug minoxidil in cell cultures.
Their results seemed almost impossible: in head-to-head tests, the apple
chemical proved to be twice as effective
as minoxidil in stimulating new hair growth.
In further experiments on mice, the apple procyanidins, as well as minoxidil,
repeatedly produced "extensive hair growth."

Proven in Double-Blind Clinical
Trials
In clinical trials on humans, the
results were even more exciting. The procyanidins from apples
consistently grew new hair in men
with male pattern baldness, the most stubborn form of unwanted hair loss- and
without any of the side effects of hair loss drugs.
Scientists are normally conservative when it comes to conclusions. But the
statements from the Takahashi group were unequivocal. "Procyanidin B-2 therapy,"
they wrote, "shows potential as a
promising cure for male pattern baldness."
For Joe, and 60 million other men and women, this research means new hope. "Of
course I'll try it," he says. "Just show me one new hair..."
David L. Kern is a medical
research analyst and editor of New Health & Longevity, a newsletter
devoted to the latest advances in medical nutritional and antiaging medicine. If
you're struggling with unwanted hair loss, get the full details on this safe,
natural hair loss product
right now at
http://www.applepoly.com/hairlossproduct
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