Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Jun 7
1,000-Year-Old Polygonum Multiflorum Shows Promise Against Hair Loss in New Review
Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Jun 7

1,000-Year-Old Polygonum Multiflorum Shows Promise Against Hair Loss in New Review

3 articles · Updated · ScienceDaily · Jun 7

Summary

  • A new scientific review says Polygonum multiflorum could emerge as a therapy for androgenetic alopecia, the most common form of hair loss affecting millions of men and women.
  • The review links the traditional root to several mechanisms at once: reducing dihydrotestosterone’s follicle-shrinking effects, activating Wnt and Shh growth signals, protecting follicle cells, and improving scalp blood flow.
  • Researchers say that multi-path action could make it broader than finasteride or minoxidil, which can help some patients but are limited by concerns over sexual side effects or scalp irritation.
  • The paper also stresses that safety depends on proper processing of the herb and warns against self-treatment, since natural products can vary by preparation, dose, and quality.
  • Evidence so far comes mainly from lab studies, historical records, and limited clinical observations, leaving large human trials as the next step before any treatment role is confirmed.

Insights

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