Method of stimulating hair growth
11602485 · 2023-03-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61H2201/1669
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B26B21/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61H99/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A method of stimulating hair growth on the scalp of a person's head using a device having a handle and a blade means, the method including the steps of: contacting the blade means on a first area of the scalp; moving the blade means in a continuous reciprocating motion on the scalp in a first direction and an opposite second direction for a first period of time to exfoliate skin on the first area, wherein the blade means remains in continuous contact with the scalp during the reciprocating motion until hair growth is detected in the first area.
Claims
1. A method of stimulating hair growth on a person's head using a device having a handle and a blade means, the method including the steps of: moving a non-cutting edge of the blade means in a first direction and moving a cutting edge of the blade in an opposite second direction across a person's head on a first area of the head to be treated continuously for a period of time; and repeating said moving step at least once at a subsequent time until hair grows through skin of the person's head and the growth of said hair is detectable, wherein the total time of said period of time and said at least one subsequent time is at least 8 hours, wherein when said area of the head reddens due to blood circulation, the moving step is performed in a further area of the head and wherein the movement in the first direction drags the blade means across a surface of the area of the head at an angle between 40 degrees and 60 degrees, and the movement in the second direction is such that the blade means is pushed against the surface at substantially the same angle.
2. The method according to claim 1 further including positioning the blade means at an angle of between 40 degrees and 60 degrees with respect to a plane generally tangential to the surface of the area of the head where the blade means contacts the surface.
3. The method according to claim 1 wherein said first area of the head to be treated is bald.
4. The method according to claim 1 wherein said first area of the head to be treated has thinning hair.
5. The method according to claim 1 wherein said first area is up to one square inch.
6. The method according to claim 1 further including performing said moving step on another area of said head when shoots of new hair growth appear in said first area.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the blade means is a razor.
8. The method according to claim 1 wherein the blade means is linear and said first direction and said second direction are substantially orthogonal to the linear direction of the blade means.
9. The method according to claim 1 wherein the method is performed for between 8 and 40 hours.
10. The method according to claim 1 wherein when said area of the head reddens due to blood circulation, the moving step is performed in a further area of the head.
11. The method according to claim 1 wherein the movement in the first direction drags the blade means across the surface at an angle between 40 degrees and 60 degrees, and the movement in the second direction is such that the blade means is pushed against the surface at substantially the same angle.
12. The method according to claim 9 further includes positioning the blade means at an angle of between 40 degrees and 60 degrees with respect to a plane generally tangential to the surface of the area of the head where the blade means contacts the surface.
13. The method according to claim 9 wherein said first area of the head to be treated is bald.
14. The method according to claim 9 wherein said first area of the head to be treated has thinning hair.
15. The method according to claim 9 wherein said first area is up to one square inch.
16. The method according to claim 9 further including performing said moving step on another area of said head when shoots of new hair growth appear in said first area.
17. The method according to claim 9, wherein the blade means is a razor.
18. The method according to claim 9 wherein the blade means is linear and said first direction and said second direction are substantially orthogonal to the linear direction of the blade means.
19. The method according to claim 9 wherein when said area of the head reddens due to blood circulation, the moving step is performed in a further area of the head.
20. A method of stimulating hair growth on the scalp of a person's head using a device having a handle and a blade means, the method including the steps of: contacting the blade means on a first area of the scalp; moving the blade means in a continuous reciprocating motion on the scalp comprising moving a non-cutting edge of the blade in a first direction and moving a cutting edge of the blade in an opposite second direction across the scalp of a person's head for a first period of time to exfoliate skin on the first area, wherein the blade means remains in continuous contact with the scalp during the reciprocating motion until hair growth is detected in the first area.
21. The method according to claim 20 wherein the method is performed for between 8 and 40 hours.
22. The method according to claim 20 wherein the movement in the first direction drags the blade means across the surface at an angle between 40 degrees and 60 degrees, and the movement in the second direction is such that the blade means is pushed against the surface at substantially the same angle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Preferred embodiments will hereinafter be described, by way of example only with reference to the drawing in which,
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(10) Referring to
(11) Referring to each of
(12) When applying the method from behind the patient or the person being worked upon, the blade 16 can be placed on and around the crown, hairline and the foreline. A vertical up and down motion is to be used in an area of about a square inch at a time. Also at the base of the neck, if required, an up and down motion is performed with the blade against the skin and the blades at an angle of between 40 degrees and 60 degrees and the handle facing upwards. If working on or around the crown, if the blade slips from the scalp, then it is facing the wrong way and the direction of the blade should be changed. The amount of pressure applied to the blade needs to be no more than the pressure that a user would apply to a toothbrush when brushing their own teeth such that skin from the scalp can be removed or exfoliated without breaking skin and causing bleeding. The process may be repeated multiple times before hair starts to regrow from the original hair follicles through the skin on the scalp. The blade means 16, preferably being a disposable razor, should be replaced each day or each time when working on a subject. The movement in the first direction drags the blade means 16 across the surface at an angle between 40 degrees and 60 degrees, and the movement in the second direction is such that the blade means 16 is pushed against the surface at substantially the same angle. The blade means 16 is generally linear and the first direction and the second direction are substantially orthogonal to the linear direction of the blade means 16.
(13) After a certain time of applying the blade 16 to one area of the scalp 32 it will become reddened at which time the up and down motion using the blade should be stopped in that area and moved to a different area on the scalp 32. It is believed that the reddening of the scalp is due to the up and down motion stimulating blood circulation around the hair follicles. The reddening of the scalp may also be due to the blade or blades removing the skin segments or exfoliating the skin covering the hair follicles. Existing hair follicles may also be cut or removed during the up and down motion. New growth of hair should appear in one to two days after at least one application of the blade in the area that became red. When the blade is moved over an area that has new shoots of hair protruding through the skin of the scalp, it will be palpable (blade drags against the blade) and audibly perceptible to the person using the blade means, such as a clicking sound. The feeling of frictional drag means that this is the correct way to use the blade means in either direction. An incorrect way to use the blade means would result in slippage over the surface. It is then necessary to work on another area where no hair is visible or the hair is thin. As mentioned previously, the whole process is repeated many times on different areas of the scalp 32 where hair is not visible or where hair is to grow. After many hours and weeks of repeating this technique, the texture of the scalp 32 will change with the new shoots of hair growing through. Up to approximately 40 hours spread over a few weeks can be the time that is spent or needed for the hair to grow in certain areas. Generally the method is performed for between 30 and 60 minutes a day, and up to 5 days a week. However, this can vary from individual to individual depending on the amount of hair loss over the years and the person's age.
(14) Approximately every month, for up to six months, the process should be repeated to improve blood circulation to the scalp, texture, and strength and durability of the hair but also to allow the follicles of the hair to grow closer together in order to achieve thicker hair. The process involves no bleeding, or cutting of the skin on the scalp nor oozing or weeping from the scalp's surface during or after the procedure. There may however be some flakiness of the skin due to exfoliation around the hair follicles in order to allow the hair follicles to breathe and the hair to break through the skin of the scalp. This promotes the hair to break through the surface of the skin and to regrow. There is no medical follow-up that is required after each procedure. A new blade or blade means should be used with use of the method.
(15) In order to thicken thinning hair, the same procedure as described above can apply to areas where the hair is scarce or patchy. This can be done for up to 10 hours, not continuously, and not the 40 or so hours needed for bald or balding hair. After a certain amount of time, a few ingrown hairs may exist. The user simply scratches, using the blade means, across the surface of the hair in order to disperse the built up fluid that surrounds the hair follicle. There is no need to squeeze or pull out the hair follicle. In one or two days the small redness area around the hair follicle will disappear. The same technique above can be used on areas of thin hair without the blade or blades cutting, catching or removing existing hair. The blade or blades tend to slide through the existing hair, however it will remove the weaker strands of hair.
EXAMPLE 1
(16) An 82 year old is the first subject to undergo the process of the present invention. His scalp was balding in various places as the foreline or hairline had been lost past his crown. The above procedure was commenced on 3 Apr. 2015 and repeated at various intervals on various days for a total period of 9 hours and 5 minutes up until 17 Apr. 2015. The first photograph of
(17) The second photograph in
(18) In the third photograph of
EXAMPLE 2
(19) A 63 year old man is the subject of this example. In the first photograph, shown in
EXAMPLE 3
(20) A 55 year old male is the subject of this example. A series of photographs in
(21) This man had thinning hair on the top of his head with the hair receding on the right side of the foreline by 1 cm more than that compared to the left side foreline. The hair was also thinning between the respective right and left forelines as well as around the crown. The photograph of
(22) Finally in
(23) With the same subject and hair around the crown, the photograph of
EXAMPLE 4
(24) The following Figures are photographs of the scalp of a 45 year old male in which the foreline is past the crown.
(25) In