If you are ready to invest in a hair loss treatment, you are not alone. Next to losing weight, losing hair is a major concern of modern day Americans, and the cornucopia of products that promise a re-growth of tresses on bald heads or an end to female hair loss is stunning. Whether your hair restoration treatment is a euphemistically termed hair system that requires shampoos, tinctures and supplements or actual hair transplantation that is a slow process, hair treatments are expensive and many need to be continued on indefinitely.
While many products promise faster hair growth, new locks, and also healthier hair, many hair loss treatments are not investigated by the Food and Drug Administration and short of medical hair restoration there is little proof that one or even a mix of them work. There are black hair care products, women’s hair loss capsules, powdered seaweed supplements, Chi hair straighteners, hair loss shampoo that must be used and alternated with baby shampoo, and even permanent facial hair removal products that claim to also re-grow hair!
Although the latter hair treatment idea seems a laughable contradiction in terms, the fact that saw palmetto extract is concurrently used as a cure for hirsutism and a hair loss solution makes one wonder. Aside from the possible impact any of these substances may have on your health and overall wellbeing, when a hair restoration treatment threatens your fiscal health, it is time to revisit the logic between the treatment for hair loss and the claim that remain largely unsubstantiated.
The biggest culprit in the money grab are online marketers who will virtually overnight erect store fronts selling a vitamin for hair loss and claim to be counselors for hair restoration surgery, even though they have little more information than the glossy brochures or the downloadable training manuals someone higher up in their multi level marketing organization has to offer. Instead of clinical expertise and medical advice, a hardcore seller of a product is seeking to counsel desperate individuals and in the end - not surprisingly - it is the hair loss vitamin the site is selling that will prove to be the best hair restoration treatment the consumer supposedly can hope for.
To prevent harming your physical wellbeing but also your fiscal health, visit a physician who does not have a stake in your decision to either pick surgical hair restoration, choose Bosley hair transplants, invest in Nexxus hair products, try laser hair growth, or go looking for a hair loss cure in your grandmother’s attic. Get medical advice rather than relying on the promises and claims of an anonymous seller whose website is gone as quickly as it sprang up.
The odds are very good that you will save yourself thousands of dollars by not signing up for long term maintenance programs which start off slow and which require you to follow a strict regimen for at least six months before you can even hope to see the first fuzz growing once again on your head.


