Biotin helps hair growth only when the cause is a biotin deficiency — which is uncommon. ThriivX H3 addresses scalp inflammation and oxidative stress, which are far more common drivers of hair loss in women over 40. If biotin has not worked for you, the cause is likely not a biotin deficiency.
| Feature | ThriivX H3 | Biotin |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Scalp inflammation reduction | Biotin deficiency correction |
| Helps with | Inflammation-driven thinning | Biotin deficiency (rare) |
| Evidence for common hair loss | Addresses the primary mechanism | Weak — most people aren't deficient |
| Who it's for | Most women with progressive thinning | People with confirmed biotin deficiency |
| What it won't help | Genetic pattern baldness alone | Inflammation, hormones, DHT |
When hair starts falling, biotin is the default. It's in every pharmacy. It has "hair, skin and nails" on the packaging. It's cheap and safe. The problem is that it only works for one specific cause of hair loss — biotin deficiency — which affects less than 1% of the general population.
For everyone else — and that's almost everyone experiencing progressive hair thinning — biotin is the right answer to the wrong question. It treats a nutrient deficiency you don't have, while the actual cause (scalp inflammation, hormonal shifts, oxidative stress) continues unchallenged.
Diagnostic value: If biotin didn't work, that's useful information. It means the problem isn't nutritional. The inflammation pathway is your next investigation point.
ThriivX H3 targets what biotin can't touch — the scalp inflammation driving your hair loss.
Shop ThriivX H3 →Most supplements address nutrient deficiency. ThriivX H3 addresses scalp inflammation — the upstream trigger that's driving follicle miniaturization.
Get ThriivX H3 →Results vary. Consult your physician before starting any supplement.