Summary of "How I Regrew My Hair Using 3 Proven Treatments (Month-by-Month Results)"
Key Hair Wellness Strategies & Self-Care Routine (Month-by-Month)
Core “proven” treatments used together
To address hair loss and restore density, the presenter uses three primary treatments (with an optional add-on for symptom control):
- Finasteride (fastrite)
- Topical minoxidil
- Dermapen-style micro-needling
- Ketoconazole shampoo (optional, for symptom control; included below for completeness)
Routine timing & technique (as described by the presenter)
Finasteride
- Dose: 1 pill daily in the morning with breakfast
- Purpose: reduce DHT, the hormone linked to hair loss
- Presenter report: no sexual side effects
Topical minoxidil
- Frequency: once per day only (the presenter explicitly notes this differs from some product marketing)
- Time: apply in the evening, about 1 hour before bed
- Reason: to avoid morning greasiness
- On shower day: wash off in the morning and hair looks “normal”
Micro-needling (dermapen / dermaroller equivalent)
- Frequency: once a week
- Needle depth used: 1.5 mm
- Goal: create micro-punctures to help minoxidil penetrate better
- Timing tip:
- Use minoxidil on the same day as micro-needling
- The presenter also mentions an optional safety approach: skip minoxidil that day and use it the next day instead
Ketoconazole shampoo (optional)
- Frequency: once a week
- Purpose:
- Partially helps regrowth (less effective than the main treatments)
- Calms scalp itching, which can occur during early “shedding” or transition weeks
Productivity / Discipline Angle (Treatment Adherence)
The presenter emphasizes that results come from consistency and a structured schedule:
- Stay committed even when shedding looks worse
- Shedding phases are often part of the process—if you continue the routine, setbacks tend to improve over time
What to Expect: Shedding Phases (and Why It Can Be a Good Sign)
First shedding phase
- Likely occurs in the first few weeks
- Hair may appear to worsen temporarily because affected hairs fall out to make room for newer growth
Second shedding phase (can happen)
- The presenter reports a second wave around month 4
- They stayed calm because shedding can occur more than once—and they continued the treatment
Key reassurance
- Shedding becomes less frequent and less severe over time
- Gradual improvement follows after each shedding phase
Month-by-Month Results (As Described)
- Start / baseline: huge density loss, especially temples
- Month 1: worst point—shedding phase
- Month 2: improvement; hairs start coming back
- Month 3: stronger gains; better than baseline
- Month 4: second shedding phase
- Month 5: still recovering, but improving
- Month 6: almost fully recovered from second shedding; noticeable improvement
- Month 8: fuller, healthier appearance (angled photo vs start)
- Month 9: density look improves—hair appears thicker vs baseline
- Month 10–11: continued progress; minor/limited shedding possible
- Month 12: “amazing results,” especially in temple area; visible recession improvement vs baseline
Presenters / Sources
- Presenter: The YouTube video’s speaker (name not provided in the subtitles; referred to as “I” by the narrator)
- External sources cited: None in the provided subtitles
Category
Wellness and Self-Improvement
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