Stevia plant could help sweeten hair loss treatment results, mouse study says

Publicly released:
Australia; NSW
Photo by Kanashi on Unsplash
Photo by Kanashi on Unsplash

Stevioside, a natural sweetener derived from the Stevia plant, could help improve hair loss treatment, according to Aussie researchers who tested the idea in mice with a mouse form of alopecia. The team gave the mice a dissolving patch formulation of stevioside with minoxidil, a hair loss treatment that is approved but dissolves and absorbs into the skin poorly. The authors found the patch helped effectively promote hair follicles to grow new hair, and say this could be a promising step towards more effective treatments.

Media release

From: Wiley

Can a Stevia-derived sweetener improve hair loss treatment?
Androgenetic alopecia is a common form of hair loss in both men and women—also called male pattern baldness and female pattern hair loss. Topical minoxidil is an approved treatment, but it has poor water solubility and skin permeability. New research in Advanced Healthcare Materialsreveals that stevioside, a natural sweetener derived from the Stevia plant, can improve the drug’s absorption into the skin.

In a mouse model of alopecia, a dissolving patch formulation of stevioside with minoxidil effectively promoted hair follicles to enter the growth phase, leading to new hair development.

“Using stevioside to enhance minoxidil delivery represents a promising step toward more effective and natural treatments for hair loss, potentially benefiting millions worldwide,” said co–corresponding author Lifeng Kang, PhD, of the University of Sydney, in Australia.

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Advanced Healthcare Materials
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Organisation/s: The University of Sydney
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