Oro Laboratory at Stanford University and Stanford Hair Loss Clinic

Some time ago I had read about hair loss research being conducted at the Oro Laboratory at Stanford University, but my initial impression from seeing their website was that the lab’s main focus was related to cancer research.

However, recently I decided to revisit their site and discovered two interesting things in the process. First, per their publications page, it seems like they published close to 15 studies related to hair loss between 2000 and 2013. This is quite impressive, especially when considering that they only published around 50 studies in total during that period of time. In fact I find it rather strange that they focused so much of their work on hair loss. I would have guessed that research and funding grants are not easily available for hair loss related work? Or maybe Bill Gates is correct in his claim that baldness research gets a lot more funding than I would have ever thought? Unfortunately, Oro Labs did not publish any hair loss related research in 2014.  Hopefully 2015 will be different.

The second thing I discovered is that Stanford has a special hair loss clinic, with the sole doctor at the clinic being Dr. Anthony Oro, after whom the Oro Laboratory is named. It seems like Dr. Oro is very passionate about hair loss and perhaps this is because he is losing some hair himself? Or perhaps it is just because the hedgehog pathway is linked to both hair follicle formation as well as to certain cancers, so there is significant research overlap?

If you are concerned about hair loss and are in California or other nearby states, I would recommend visiting the hair clinic at Stanford University and talking to Dr. Oro. After all, how many other universities in the world have their very own hair clinic in addition to a laboratory that does significant hair loss related research? I very much doubt that most other famous hair loss researchers in the world also meet with patients. If I happen to visit California in the near future, I will probably try to see Dr. Oro prior to doing any sightseeing.

Dr. Valerie Horsley, Dr. Craig Ziering, Fat Cells and Hair Growth

In recent years, various researchers have found a strong connection between hair cells and fat cells and their communication with each other. I covered some of this in a post from last year.

Dr. Valerie Horsley

A year or so ago, I bookmarked a video from Dr. Valerie Horsley regarding the link between fat cells and hair cells on the scalp that I wanted to post on this blog, but postponed doing so after visiting the Horsley Laboratory (at Yale University) website and not seeing much on hair loss research developments in the news page. I was waiting to post that video as part of a longer post also covering a recent news development, and today is finally the day. First, since the video cannot be embedded, here is the link to it.

You can also read more about the Horsley Lab’s findings here. Apparently, fat cells in the skin “talk” to hair cells and this communication is necessary to induce hair growth. The lab’s researchers are trying to find ways to re-enable this communication and perhaps grow back hair in balding regions.

Dr. Craig Ziering

Now as far as the recent news development goes, it is not a newspaper item, but rather, an interesting new addition to a well known hair transplant surgeon’s product offerings.  Dr. Craig Ziering, who is based in the US, seems to have recently updated his UK website, and one of the pages on there (Edit: no longer there) was quite a surprise to me.  Dr. Ziering has apparently invented a trademarked “STEMULATION” device to separate stem cells from extracted body fat, which are then injected into the scalp to aid hair growth. The webpage is not complete yet (a lot of “lorem ipsum” placeholder text in there), and there is not much on the page about studies that support this new procedure. It also seems like the contents of that webpage disappeared and came back and then disappeared yet again and then got moved somewhere else and then disappeared again from the new location (I got some of these updates in the hair loss chat on this site)! I am skeptical about this whole thing, but the EU has given Dr. Ziering a CE Mark that is required to sell or market a medical device.