Rapamycin for Hair Growth and Hair Pigmentation

I have read most of your posts on hair. Has your personal hair tonic with Rapamycin worked on your hair? If so what is your final recipe?

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Hey Zac the original recipe… last one… worked well.

Then, took a year break when I started HGH… hoping it might help hair growth.

One year later no treatment… but oral minoxidil a lot less hair on top. However, sides and back…very thick.

Going to remake a batch… of original… andvadd sugars…

Seen in the picture below.

5 white tablets 500mg Metformin
4 green pills 2mg each… Zydus Sirolimus
4 pills blue pills Finasteride
Rosemary oil
Diclofenac gel
Odorless DMSO,
5% Minoxidol topical 2 fluid oz.
5 white pills Minoxidol

3 capsules ECGC
3 capsules Resveratrol

The main changes were added Rosemary oil and Diclofenac Gel

And adding 2-Deoxi Di-ribose and Stevia… sugars are suppose to help when topically applied.

.

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Bold claims of hair regrowth from specially formulated amino acid formula:

From the website:

It’s probably BS imo but who knows? It might help for people suffering telogen effluvium but I doubt it would touch androgenic alopecia.

Video summary:

• The video claims a specific drinkable “neutrautical” product called Neutrios significantly reduced hair shedding and visibly increased hair volume and density in users, with data referenced by pulling tests and before-and-after photos.

• The creator states the formula is patented and insists it has peer-reviewed scientific backing, although exact study citations or independent validation are not shown in the video itself.

• The presenter emphasizes that the product differs from standard supplements because of its unique, proprietary amino acid ratios and that consuming more sachets purportedly increases effect.

• Users are told to take it on an empty stomach so dietary amino acids do not disrupt absorption, and the presenter mentions his long history of personal and group use.

• The product’s manufacturer is portrayed as highly reputable with numerous clinical patents spanning other areas like skin and sports medicine.

• The video is also used as a promotional piece encouraging viewers to join a paid community where access and priority on this and other similar products are offered.

• Independent clinical research on drinkable hair supplements (not necessarily the same product) exists showing that certain formulations can increase hair density, improve the ratio of growing to resting hair follicles, and reduce hair shedding in women with telogen effluvium over months of use. In a published pilot study, a once-daily drinkable nutraceutical improved hair density and reduced shedding after six months in female subjects, with significant changes in hair growth cycle markers.

• A scientific consensus on oral hair growth supplements is still developing: some complex supplement studies show modest increases in hair density and subjective improvements, but larger randomized placebo-controlled trials are limited and evidence varies by ingredient.

• Overall, while some research supports the idea that targeted oral supplements can affect hair growth metrics, the specific claims made in the video should be interpreted cautiously without access to validated data tied directly to the branded product.

If AI can point this out and then not instantly recognize that this is a scam…

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That is the guy promoting his Skool group. Not necessarily an indicator that the product is a scam.

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