We all think of caffeine
as a stimulant that we drink. I certainly drink coffee and yerba mate, the occasional energy
drink, things of that sort. Caffeine does many things
besides stimulate our central nervous system and make
us feel less sleepy. However, one of the things that caffeine does is
it is a fairly potent PDE inhibitor. By being a potent PDE inhibitor, it indirectly stimulates IGF-1. Why? Well, because PDE
can suppress IGF-1 and by ingesting caffeine or by applying topical caffeine ointment or cream to the scalp, you can suppress PDE sufficiently enough to increase IGF-1 and
increase some hair growth or at least maintain hair
growth in that region. Now, this may come as a shock. It might seem a little bit esoteric or even outside the margins
of typical treatments, but head-to-head topical
caffeine application can be as effective as minoxidil
application without actually lowering things like blood pressure and potentially increasing prolactin. And some of the other negative,
let's call them negative because they are side
effects of minoxidil. So caffeine ointments and caffeine present in
various hair treatments and creams, et cetera, is starting to become a more
prominent theme out there. I will include a reference to caffeine and its uses for offsetting hair loss. Keep in mind that topical
caffeine ointments shouldn't necessarily be applied every single day. So this is the sort of thing you might do three times a week. The concentration of caffeine
in different ointments varies tremendously. Most of the studies of caffeine
on the stem cell niches that control hair growth and extension of the antigen phase of hair growth have been
performed in vitro in a dish. Although there are some
clinical studies exploring this, they are not nearly as extensive in number or duration as the studies of minoxidil because this approach just
hasn't been around quite as long. However, when comparing side
effects of minoxidil, cost of minoxidil comparing
the efficacy of caffeine and minoxidil, I think
caffeine as a topical treatment for offsetting hair loss stands as a pretty good choice if you're going to start exploring this pathway. And there's no reason to
think that if you were to try the caffeine ointment
and it didn't work for you, or you didn't like it for some reason, or you needed to stop it for some reason, that you couldn't stop it safely because it doesn't carry all
the other kind of blood pressure related effects and prolactinemia
effects that minoxidil does. So if you look out there
into the hair maintenance and hair replacement literature,
you look at the treatments that are being sold, don't be surprised to see caffeine there. And also, don't be surprised
when I tell you what I'm about to tell you now, which is no, you can't simply just drink
more caffeine in order to accomplish the goal
of offsetting hair loss. It is true that when you ingest caffeine, it goes systemically. However, you have so many
adenosine receptors throughout your body, those adenosine receptors, and the parking of caffeine in
those adenosine receptors is the main way in which caffeine
exerts its stimulatory effects making you feel less sleepy. So it does that because then adenosine
can't have its effects, which are to make you sleepy. Well, those adenosine
receptors soak up so much of the caffeine that you
would ingest orally that very, very little would make it to the scalp and to the hair follicles at the concentrations that you would want. So that's why you have to
rely on the application of these caffeine ointments
about three times a week. Keep in mind that no one has
really explored the dosages of caffeine in these
ointments in a systematic way. We are still in the
early stages of all this, but I do think it's
important to mention caffeine because of the lower
incidences of side effects, at least reported side effects, and the general safety margins and the head-to-head,
essentially comparable efficacy with minoxidil because minoxidil has a bunch of other issues. Now, keep in mind that both minoxidil and caffeine are generally
used as a preventative for reducing hair loss over time. They are not expected and they do not, as far as we
know, create new hair growth to any sufficient degree. If any of you have used
caffeine ointments or minoxidil and observed new hair
growth that was robust, please put that in the comment section. I'd be curious about those experiences. But as far as I know, and
from the clinical literature that I read, there's no examples of that. One other point about
caffeine, it does appear that caffeine can not only
indirectly stimulate IGF-1 in the antigen phase of hair cell
growth by way of reducing PDE and TGF-β, but it also seems to reduce apoptosis, which is naturally occurring cell death of that stem cell niche. We've been talking a lot about the antigen or growth phase of hair. We also talked about the catagen or the recession of that
hair from the inside out. But remember that third
phase, the telogen phase where that whole bulb down at the
bottom, the bulges it's called, gets pinched off and the whole thing dies and takes the stem cells
off to the grave with it. It appears that caffeine can
offset the death of that niche and potentially maintain
the stem cell population longer, making caffeine a really good choice to
think about in conjunction with the various chemical
treatments aimed at directly attacking the DHT pathway that we'll talk about next. [MUSIC PLAYING]