Hello and welcome to healthcaremagic
I have gone through your query and I have understood it.
Traditionally
Minoxidil and
Finasteride have been used for androgenetic
alopecia since they were approved by US FDA way back in 90's. However, the response to these traditional remedies has a limit and one cannot expect to regain all the lost hair. The aim of these remedies being halting further progression.
Newer approaches that have become available for androgenetic alopecia are PRP and
Hair transplantation.
In PRP (Platelet rich plasma) an autologous concentration of human platelets in a small volume of plasma is obtained from the patient's own blood after processing in an automated centrifuge and it is injected subcutaneously into the area of alopecia.
The beneficial effects of PRP in Androgenetic Alopecia can be attributed to various platelet-derived growth factors causing improvement in the function of hair follicle and promotion of hair growth.
It is safe, cheap, and non-allergic and it appears to be a useful adjuvant in the management of androgenetic alopecia.
Hair transplant is the best option. Hair transplantation is broadly achieved by removing grafts from the back (occipital area) of the
scalp which are more resistant to
hormonal changes, and placing them in areas of scanty growth or
baldness. It is definitely more expensive than PRP, but gives lasting results.
Regards