Laser helmets are heavily marketed as a painless, at-home solution for hair regrowth. They promise thicker hair using red light therapy without medicines or surgery.
But the real question is:
Do laser helmets actually work—or are medical treatments more effective?
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, we evaluate hair loss treatments based on biological science, clinical evidence, and long-term outcomes—not marketing trends.
Let’s break this down honestly.
What Are Laser Helmets?
Laser helmets use Low-Level Laser Therapy (LLLT).
They emit:
Red light (typically 630–680 nm)
Low-energy photons
Non-thermal stimulation
The goal is to:
Increase blood circulation
Stimulate follicle activity
Extend growth phase (anagen)
This therapy is FDA-cleared for safety—but clearance does not equal guaranteed effectiveness.
How Laser Therapy Works (The Theory)
LLLT is believed to:
Improve mitochondrial activity
Increase ATP production
Reduce scalp inflammation
Stimulate dormant follicles
However, the effect size is generally mild to moderate, not dramatic.
When Laser Helmets May Help
Laser therapy may benefit:
Early-stage genetic hair loss
Mild thinning
Diffuse shedding
As supportive therapy post-transplant
It works best when follicles are still alive.
Limitations of Laser Helmets
Laser helmets:
Do not block DHT
Do not reverse advanced baldness
Cannot create new follicles
Require consistent long-term use
Most patients need 3–6 months before noticing subtle improvement.
Stopping treatment often reverses gains.
What Are Medical Treatments?
Medical hair loss treatments include:
DHT-blocking therapy
Topical growth stimulators
Regenerative injections (PRP/GFC)
Nutritional correction
Prescription therapy for autoimmune hair loss
These treatments address the root biological causes of hair thinning.
Comparing Effectiveness
Factor
Laser Helmets
Medical Treatments
DHT Control
No
Yes
Follicle Revival
Mild
Moderate to High
Works in Advanced Baldness
No
Limited
Evidence Strength
Moderate
Stronger
Long-Term Impact
Supportive
Primary treatment
Laser helmets are supportive tools—not standalone solutions.
What Actually Stops Genetic Hair Loss?
Genetic hair loss is driven by:
DHT sensitivity
Follicle miniaturization
Progressive thinning
Laser therapy does not stop DHT.
Medical therapy is required to slow progression.
Without DHT control, hair thinning continues.
What About Combining Both?
Laser therapy can be useful as an adjunct:
Along with medical treatment
After hair transplant
For maintaining mild thinning
Combination therapy may provide incremental benefit.
But relying only on laser helmets often leads to disappointment.
Cost vs Value Consideration
Laser helmets are expensive devices.
Before investing, consider:
Stage of hair loss
Diagnosis accuracy
Medical treatment options
Long-term cost-benefit
Many patients spend large amounts on devices before seeking medical evaluation.
When Laser Helmets Are Not Recommended
Laser helmets are unlikely to help in:
Grade 4–7 baldness
Completely bald scalp areas
Scarred scalp
Advanced miniaturization
In these cases, medical or surgical intervention is required.
RECOMB’s Evidence-Based Position (2026)
At RECOMB:
Laser therapy is considered supportive
It is not positioned as a replacement for medical care
Proper diagnosis comes first
Treatment is personalized
We prioritize therapies with proven biological impact.
Final Medical Conclusion
Laser helmets:
Can provide mild stimulation
May improve early thinning
Work best as supportive therapy
Medical treatments:
Address the root cause
Slow genetic progression
Provide stronger evidence-based outcomes
If you are serious about long-term hair preservation, medical evaluation should always be the first step.
Hair vitamins are among the most heavily marketed health products today. From biotin gummies to “advanced hair growth capsules,” advertisements promise thicker hair in weeks.
Yet many patients report the same frustration: “I took hair vitamins for months and nothing changed.”
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, we regularly evaluate patients who relied on supplements while their hair loss progressed. Understanding why most hair vitamins fail requires understanding the biology of hair loss.
The First Problem: No Diagnosis
The biggest reason hair vitamins fail is simple:
Most people start supplements without identifying the real cause of hair loss.
Hair loss can be due to:
Genetic factors (androgenetic alopecia)
Nutritional deficiencies
Autoimmune conditions
Hormonal imbalance
Stress-related shedding
Vitamins help only in one of these categories: nutritional deficiency.
Genetic Hair Loss Cannot Be Fixed by Vitamins
Androgenetic alopecia occurs due to:
Genetic sensitivity to DHT
Progressive follicle miniaturization
Gradual thinning patterns
Hair vitamins:
Do not block DHT
Do not reverse miniaturization
Do not restore dead follicles
This is why most men with receding hairlines see no improvement with supplements.
Biotin Is Rarely Deficient
Biotin is the most advertised hair vitamin.
However:
True biotin deficiency is rare
Most people already have adequate levels
Excess biotin is excreted in urine
Taking high doses of biotin when levels are normal provides minimal benefit.
One of the most common questions patients ask is: “Is my hair loss due to poor nutrition, or is it genetic?”
This confusion leads many people to rely on supplements, oils, or diet changes—often while ignoring the real cause. The truth is more nuanced.
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, we see daily evidence that nutrition and genetics play very different roles in hair loss, and understanding this difference is critical for choosing the right treatment.
Understanding Genetic Hair Loss
What Is Genetic Hair Loss?
Genetic hair loss, medically called androgenetic alopecia, is caused by:
Genetic sensitivity of hair follicles to DHT (dihydrotestosterone)
Progressive miniaturization of follicles
Predictable patterns (hairline, temples, crown)
This type of hair loss:
Is inherited
Progresses over time
Does not reverse with diet alone
Key Features of Genetic Hair Loss
Gradual thinning, not sudden shedding
Receding hairline or crown thinning
Strong family history
Permanent follicle damage over time
Once follicles miniaturize beyond a point, no nutrition can revive them.
Understanding Nutrition-Related Hair Loss
How Nutrition Affects Hair
Hair is a non-essential tissue. When the body lacks nutrients, hair growth is one of the first processes to slow down.
Nutritional deficiencies can cause:
Telogen effluvium (diffuse shedding)
Weak, brittle hair
Reduced hair thickness
Temporary thinning
This type of hair loss is usually reversible.
Common Nutritional Causes of Hair Loss
Iron deficiency and low ferritin
Vitamin D deficiency
Protein deficiency
Zinc deficiency
Crash dieting or extreme weight loss
Malabsorption or gut issues
Correcting these deficiencies often restores hair growth.
Nutrition vs Genetics: The Core Difference
Factor
Nutritional Hair Loss
Genetic Hair Loss
Onset
Sudden
Gradual
Pattern
Diffuse
Patterned
Reversibility
High
Progressive
Hairline
Preserved
Recedes
Bald Patches
No
Yes (advanced)
Cure with Diet
Often
No
This distinction is crucial for treatment planning.
Can Poor Nutrition Cause Permanent Baldness?
No.
Poor nutrition can cause heavy shedding, but it does not permanently destroy hair follicles.
However, if nutritional hair loss is ignored for a long time, it can:
Unmask underlying genetic baldness
Accelerate visible thinning
Reduce overall hair volume
Nutrition may act as a trigger, not the root cause.
Why Supplements Often Disappoint Patients
Many patients take:
Biotin
Multivitamins
Hair gummies
without testing for deficiencies.
If genetics is the main cause:
Supplements show little or no improvement
Hairline continues to recede
Crown keeps thinning
This leads to frustration and delayed medical care.
Can Good Nutrition Stop Genetic Hair Loss?
No.
Good nutrition:
Improves hair quality
Reduces breakage
Supports overall scalp health
But it cannot block DHT or stop follicle miniaturization.
Genetic hair loss requires medical or surgical intervention, not diet alone.
When Nutrition and Genetics Coexist
In real life, many patients have both:
Genetic predisposition
Nutritional deficiency
In such cases:
Nutrition correction reduces shedding
Medical therapy slows genetic progression
Combined treatment gives the best results
Ignoring either factor leads to incomplete outcomes.
Sudden hair fall can be frightening—especially when large amounts of hair appear on your pillow, bathroom floor, or hairbrush. Many people immediately fear permanent baldness. In reality, one of the most common causes of sudden hair fall is Telogen Effluvium, a condition that is usually reversible.
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, Surat, telogen effluvium is one of the most frequently diagnosed hair loss conditions. Correct diagnosis is critical because treating telogen effluvium like genetic baldness can lead to unnecessary anxiety and wrong treatment choices.
What Is Telogen Effluvium?
Telogen effluvium (TE) is a hair cycle disorder, not a disease of the hair follicle itself.
Normally:
85–90% of hair is in the growth (anagen) phase
10–15% is in the resting (telogen) phase
In telogen effluvium:
A large number of hairs prematurely shift into the telogen phase
These hairs shed together after 2–3 months
Importantly, the hair follicles remain alive, which means regrowth is possible.
Key Symptoms of Telogen Effluvium
Common signs include:
Sudden excessive hair fall
Diffuse shedding across the scalp
Hair fall while washing or combing
Thinning ponytail or reduced volume
No defined bald patches
Normal-looking scalp
Hairline usually remains intact, which helps differentiate it from pattern baldness.
What Causes Telogen Effluvium?
Telogen effluvium is usually triggered by a physical or emotional stressor that occurred 2–3 months earlier.
1. Severe Emotional Stress
Anxiety
Grief
Trauma
Major life events
2. Illness or High Fever
Viral infections
Dengue, typhoid
COVID-19
Post-hospitalization
3. Nutritional Deficiencies
Iron deficiency
Low ferritin
Vitamin D deficiency
Crash dieting or extreme weight loss
4. Hormonal Changes
Post-pregnancy hair loss
Thyroid disorders
Stopping oral contraceptive pills
5. Surgery or Major Physical Trauma
Any surgery under anesthesia
Blood loss
Prolonged illness
6. Medications
Certain drugs can trigger telogen effluvium, especially when started or stopped abruptly.
Acute vs Chronic Telogen Effluvium
Acute Telogen Effluvium
Lasts less than 6 months
Trigger is identifiable
Full regrowth expected
Chronic Telogen Effluvium
Lasts longer than 6 months
Often seen in women
May fluctuate over years
Requires long-term monitoring
How Telogen Effluvium Is Diagnosed
At RECOMB, diagnosis includes:
Detailed medical and stress history
Hair pull test
Scalp examination
Trichoscopy
Blood tests if required
Correct diagnosis avoids unnecessary treatments like hair transplant or long-term medications.
Effective Treatments for Telogen Effluvium
1. Identify and Correct the Trigger
This is the most important step. Hair fall improves only after the underlying cause is addressed.
Dermarollers have gained massive popularity as a home-based solution for hair loss. Many people use them after watching social media videos or reading online advice. Unfortunately, incorrect dermaroller use can damage the scalp, worsen hair fall, or cause infections.
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, Surat, we frequently treat patients who either overused or misused dermarollers. This guide explains the medically correct way to use a dermaroller for hair loss, who should use it, and who should avoid it.
What Is a Dermaroller?
A dermaroller is a handheld device fitted with microneedles that create tiny controlled injuries in the scalp.
The purpose of dermarolling is to:
Stimulate blood circulation
Activate wound-healing growth factors
Improve absorption of topical treatments
Trigger follicle stimulation
Dermarolling does not create new hair follicles, but it can improve the function of existing ones.
How Dermarolling Helps in Hair Loss
Dermarolling works mainly by:
Activating stem cells in hair follicles
Increasing growth factor release
Enhancing penetration of minoxidil or growth serums
Improving scalp health
It is most useful in early-stage androgenetic alopecia, not advanced baldness.
Choosing the Correct Dermaroller Needle Size
Needle Size
Use
0.25 mm
Improves product absorption only
0.5 mm
Mild stimulation, beginners
1.0 mm
Optimal for hair loss treatment
1.5 mm
Medical supervision only
2.0 mm
Not recommended for home use
Medical recommendation:
For home use, 1.0 mm is the safest and most effective size.
Step-by-Step: Right Way to Use Dermaroller for Hair Loss
Step 1: Clean the Scalp
Wash hair with a mild shampoo
Ensure scalp is oil-free and clean
Step 2: Disinfect the Dermaroller
Soak in 70% alcohol for 5–10 minutes
Let it air dry
Never use an unclean dermaroller.
Step 3: Proper Rolling Technique
Divide scalp into sections
Roll gently in:
Vertical direction
Horizontal direction
Diagonal direction
Roll each direction 6–8 times
Apply light pressure only
Pain or bleeding means excessive force.
Step 4: Frequency of Use
1.0 mm dermaroller: Once weekly
0.5 mm dermaroller: Twice weekly
Daily dermarolling is harmful and ineffective.
Step 5: Post-Rolling Care
Mild redness for a few hours is normal
Avoid oil, dust, sweat for 24 hours
Use doctor-recommended topical products
Avoid sun exposure on the scalp
When to Apply Minoxidil After Dermarolling?
Wait 12–24 hours after 1.0 mm dermarolling
Applying immediately may cause irritation or systemic absorption
This step is critical and often ignored.
Common Mistakes People Make
Using long needles without supervision
Rolling daily
Applying excessive pressure
Using cheap or blunt rollers
Sharing dermarollers
Using on infected or inflamed scalp
These mistakes can worsen hair loss instead of improving it.
Who Should Use Dermaroller?
Dermarolling may help if you have:
Early hair thinning
Mild androgenetic alopecia
Stable hair loss
Good donor and scalp health
It works best as a supportive therapy, not a standalone cure.
Who Should Avoid Dermaroller?
Avoid dermarolling if you have:
Active scalp infection
Psoriasis or severe dandruff
Alopecia areata (active phase)
Keloid tendency
Post-hair transplant (until cleared by doctor)
In such cases, dermarolling can cause harm.
Dermaroller vs PRP vs GFC
Treatment
Effectiveness
Supervision
Dermaroller
Mild–Moderate
Home-based
PRP
Moderate–High
Doctor-led
GFC
High
Doctor-led
Dermaroller is not a replacement for PRP or GFC.
RECOMB’s Medical Advice on Dermarolling
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, dermarollers are advised:
Only after diagnosis
With correct needle size
With controlled frequency
As part of a broader treatment plan
We discourage blind self-treatment.
Final Medical Conclusion
Dermarolling can help hair loss only when done correctly.
Incorrect use causes more harm than benefit.
Alopecia areata is one of the most misunderstood hair loss conditions. Patients often panic when they notice sudden round or oval bald patches, fearing permanent baldness. The reality is very different.
Alopecia areata is an autoimmune condition, not genetic baldness and not a cosmetic issue. With early diagnosis and correct treatment, hair regrowth is possible in many cases.
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, Surat, alopecia areata is managed medically and ethically, never surgically unless clearly indicated.
What Is Alopecia Areata?
Alopecia areata occurs when the immune system mistakenly attacks hair follicles, pushing them into a resting phase.
Key characteristics:
Sudden patchy hair loss
Smooth, non-scarring bald patches
Hair follicles remain alive
Potential for spontaneous regrowth
Because follicles are not destroyed, alopecia areata is considered a reversible form of hair loss in many patients.
Types of Alopecia Areata
1. Patchy Alopecia Areata
Most common form
One or multiple bald patches
Good prognosis with treatment
2. Alopecia Totalis
Complete scalp hair loss
More resistant to treatment
3. Alopecia Universalis
Loss of all body hair
Rare and severe
4. Ophiasis Pattern
Hair loss along sides and back of scalp
Often chronic
Identifying the pattern helps determine prognosis and treatment intensity.
What Causes Alopecia Areata?
1. Autoimmune Dysfunction
The immune system targets hair follicles, mistaking them for foreign cells.
2. Genetic Predisposition
Family history of autoimmune diseases increases risk, though direct inheritance is uncommon.
3. Stress and Emotional Triggers
Severe emotional or physical stress can trigger or worsen episodes.
4. Associated Autoimmune Conditions
Common associations include:
Thyroid disorders
Vitiligo
Atopic dermatitis
Type 1 diabetes
Common Myths About Alopecia Areata
It is not contagious
It is not caused by poor diet alone
It is not permanent in most cases
Hair transplant is not first-line treatment
Understanding these facts prevents unnecessary fear and wrong treatment choices.
How Is Alopecia Areata Diagnosed?
Diagnosis is clinical and supported by:
Scalp examination
Trichoscopy (exclamation mark hairs)
Blood tests for autoimmune markers if needed
Early diagnosis improves treatment success.
Effective Treatment Options for Alopecia Areata
1. Intralesional Corticosteroid Injections
Gold standard for patchy alopecia areata
Reduces immune attack on follicles
Promotes regrowth within weeks
2. Topical Immunotherapy
Used in extensive or resistant cases under strict supervision.
3. Topical and Oral Medications
Corticosteroids
Immunomodulators
JAK inhibitors (selected cases, specialist use only)
4. PRP and GFC Therapy (Adjunctive Role)
These treatments:
Improve follicle environment
Support regrowth
Do not cure autoimmune activity
Used only as supportive therapy, not standalone treatment.
Why Hair Transplant Is Usually Not Recommended
Hair transplant is contraindicated in active alopecia areata because:
Immune attack continues
Transplanted hair may fall
Disease may spread unpredictably
Only rare, long-term inactive cases may be evaluated for surgery, with caution.
Prognosis: Will Hair Grow Back?
Prognosis depends on:
Age of onset
Extent of hair loss
Number of patches
Associated autoimmune disease
Many patients experience:
Partial or complete regrowth
Recurrent episodes
Long-term remission with treatment
Early medical care significantly improves outcomes.
RECOMB’s Medical Approach to Alopecia Areata
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, alopecia areata management focuses on:
Correct diagnosis
Immune control
Conservative, evidence-based treatment
Avoiding unnecessary surgery
Psychological reassurance
Patient education is as important as medication.
Final Medical Perspective
Alopecia areata is treatable, manageable, and often reversible—but only when approached correctly.
It is an autoimmune disease, not cosmetic baldness
Early treatment improves regrowth
Hair transplant is rarely indicated
Medical supervision is essential
At RECOMB, we treat alopecia areata with science, patience, and honesty.
Whey protein is one of the most widely used supplements among gym-goers, athletes, and fitness enthusiasts. At the same time, hair loss complaints are increasingly common in young adults. This has led to a popular belief:
“Whey protein causes hair loss.”
But is this scientifically true, or is whey protein being blamed unfairly?
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, Surat, we evaluate this question from a medical, hormonal, and nutritional perspective, separating facts from gym-floor myths.
What Is Whey Protein?
Whey protein is a high-quality dairy protein derived during cheese production. It contains:
Essential amino acids
Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs)
High leucine content
It supports:
Muscle recovery
Protein synthesis
Strength and endurance
By itself, whey protein is not a hormone and not a steroid.
Does Whey Protein Directly Cause Hair Loss?
No. Whey protein does not directly cause hair loss.
There is no scientific evidence proving that whey protein alone damages hair follicles or causes baldness.
However, in certain individuals, whey protein may accelerate hair loss indirectly.
The Real Link: Whey Protein, Hormones, and Genetics
1. Whey Protein and IGF-1
Whey protein can increase Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1) levels.
IGF-1:
Supports muscle growth
Can indirectly increase androgen activity
In genetically susceptible individuals, this may speed up androgenetic alopecia, but it does not initiate hair loss on its own.
2. Genetic Hair Loss Gets Triggered Faster
If you have:
Family history of baldness
Early temple recession
Crown thinning
Whey protein may unmask or accelerate hair loss that was already programmed genetically.
Without genetic predisposition, whey protein does not cause baldness.
3. Over-Supplementation and Nutritional Imbalance
Excessive protein intake without:
Adequate micronutrients
Proper hydration
Balanced diet
can worsen:
Telogen effluvium
Hair shaft dryness
Increased shedding
This is nutritional mismanagement, not whey toxicity.
What Whey Protein Does NOT Do
Whey protein:
Does not kill hair follicles
Does not cause permanent bald patches
Does not replace DHT
Does not cause hair loss in non-genetic individuals
Blaming whey protein alone is medically inaccurate.
Why Gym-Goers Often Notice Hair Loss
Hair loss in gym-goers is often due to:
Genetic predisposition
Anabolic steroid use (often hidden)
Creatine misuse (controversial but debated)
Crash dieting
Rapid fat loss
Sleep deprivation
Stress
Whey protein becomes the scapegoat, not the root cause.
Whey Protein vs Anabolic Steroids (Important Distinction)
Factor
Whey Protein
Anabolic Steroids
Hormonal Effect
Minimal
Severe
DHT Impact
Indirect
Direct
Hair Loss Risk
Low
Very High
Medical Safety
High
Dangerous
Reversibility
Yes
Often No
Many patients unknowingly consume contaminated or stacked supplements, confusing the cause of hair loss.
Who Should Be Cautious with Whey Protein?
You should monitor hair health closely if you:
Have strong family history of baldness
Are under 25 with early hair thinning
Consume very high protein doses
Are using multiple performance supplements
This does not mean stopping whey protein, but using it wisely.
When non-surgical hair loss treatments are discussed, Mesotherapy and PRP (Platelet-Rich Plasma) are often compared. Both involve scalp injections, but their composition, mechanism, consistency, and long-term effectiveness are very different.
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, Surat, treatment selection is based on diagnosis and evidence—not popularity. This article provides a clear, medical comparison to help patients understand which option is superior and for whom.
What Is Mesotherapy?
Mesotherapy for hair loss involves injecting a cocktail of substances into the scalp. These may include:
Vitamins (biotin, B-complex)
Amino acids
Minerals
Vasodilators
Sometimes medications
How Mesotherapy Works
Mesotherapy aims to:
Improve scalp nutrition
Increase local blood flow
Support hair shaft quality
However, the formulation is not standardized and varies between clinics.
What Is PRP Therapy?
PRP uses the patient’s own blood, processed to concentrate platelets rich in growth factors.
How PRP Works
PRP helps by:
Activating dermal papilla cells
Increasing blood supply
Reducing follicular inflammation
Prolonging the growth (anagen) phase
Improving hair thickness and density
PRP acts at a cellular and regenerative level, not just nutritional support.
Core Difference: Nutrition vs Regeneration
Aspect
Mesotherapy
PRP
Source
External drug cocktail
Patient’s own blood
Mechanism
Nutritional stimulation
Cellular regeneration
Standardization
Low
High
Growth Factors
No
Yes
Inflammation Control
Minimal
Strong
Scientific Evidence
Limited
Stronger
This fundamental difference explains why outcomes vary significantly.
Effectiveness Comparison
Mesotherapy Results
Mild reduction in hair fall
Temporary improvement in hair texture
Best for nutritional or stress-related shedding
Effects often short-lived
PRP Results
Reduction in hair fall
Improved hair thickness
Activation of dormant follicles
Better long-term stabilization
Clinical observation: PRP consistently outperforms mesotherapy in androgenetic alopecia.
Which Works Better for Genetic Hair Loss?
PRP is superior.
Androgenetic alopecia is driven by:
DHT sensitivity
Follicular inflammation
Progressive miniaturization
Mesotherapy does not address these core mechanisms effectively. PRP, through growth factors, modulates follicular biology, making it more suitable for genetic hair loss.
Safety and Side Effects
Mesotherapy
Risk of allergic reaction
Depends on drug quality
Variable sterility standards
Higher chance of scalp irritation
PRP
Autologous (from patient’s own body)
Minimal allergy risk
Lower infection risk when done properly
Better tolerated long-term
From a safety standpoint, PRP is clearly superior.
Session Requirement and Consistency
Parameter
Mesotherapy
PRP
Sessions Needed
8–12
4–6
Result Consistency
Variable
Predictable
Maintenance
Frequent
Periodic
Long-Term Value
Low
Higher
Why Some Patients Don’t Respond to Mesotherapy
Common reasons include:
Genetic hair loss
Poor-quality drug cocktails
Lack of standard protocol
No regenerative stimulus
Advanced hair loss stage
This leads to dissatisfaction and treatment hopping.
RECOMB’s Clinical Recommendation (2026)
At RECOMB Hair Transplant Centre, our protocol is clear:
Mesotherapy: Limited role, only in selected nutritional or telogen effluvium cases
PRP: Preferred non-surgical option for early to moderate hair loss
GFC: Chosen when stronger and more consistent results are required
Hair Transplant: For permanent hair loss areas
We avoid mesotherapy as a routine treatment for pattern baldness.
Final Medical Verdict
PRP is superior to mesotherapy for hair loss, especially in:
Androgenetic alopecia
Diffuse thinning
Post-transplant maintenance
Mesotherapy may help temporarily, but PRP offers biological regeneration and better long-term control.
Choosing the right treatment depends on diagnosis—not marketing.