Treatments

PRP vs exosomes for hair: what to ask before you pay

Two injection options — what they are, safety basics, diagnosis first.

Published Updated Last reviewed

Clinics often pitch injections for thinning hair. PRP usually means concentrating platelets from your own blood; exosome products differ widely by source, lab, and what regulators allow where you live. Evidence and safety are not the same for both, and marketing can outrun data. This page equips questions for your clinician — it does not choose a product for you, and a clear diagnosis should still come first.

What PRP involves

PRP generally refers to concentrating platelets from your own blood for injection or application according to a clinic protocol. Preparation methods and treatment schedules differ between practices, which partly explains variable outcomes in published literature.

What exosome treatments involve

Exosome therapies may refer to extracellular vesicle preparations, often marketed as regenerative. Source, manufacturing, purity, and regulatory classification are not uniform globally. Ask what you are receiving, from where, and what evidence supports use for your diagnosis.

What research actually shows

Randomised trials exist for PRP in some contexts, with heterogeneity in technique and follow-up. Exosome therapies have a less mature evidence base for hair loss in many jurisdictions. Absence of long-term data should be part of informed discussion.

Safety, regulation, and red flags

Any injection carries infection, pain, and rare complication risk. Products should be traceable and compliant with local regulation. Be cautious of marketing that promises uniform regrowth or replaces medical assessment.

Who might even be a candidate

Candidacy depends on diagnosis, pattern, expectations, and what has already been tried. Many plans still prioritise established medical therapies where appropriate; see finasteride vs saw palmetto for context on oral options — always prescriber-led.

Before you book injections

Ensure diagnosis is clear, alternatives are understood, and photographic baselines are agreed. If you are evaluating surgical pathways or audit of past surgery, the ecosystem includes dedicated resources such as HairAudit — distinct from HLI’s biology-first medical interpretation focus (see HLI vs HairAudit).

Blood tests and general health (if your team suggests them)

Some teams check nutrition or thyroid markers before or with injections when your history fits. That is the same selective approach as elsewhere — see what blood tests matter for hair loss.

Who wrote this and who checked it

Articles are drafted for patient clarity, then reviewed for medical accuracy under HLI editorial standards. Sources are listed where they help you verify claims; this education still does not replace an exam or plan from your own clinician.

Author

Hair Longevity Institute Editorial

Clinical education

Trichology-led medical writing

Reviewer

HLI Clinical Review

Medical accuracy review

Senior trichology sign-off before publication; same review standard across insight articles.

Frequently asked questions

Which works better, PRP or exosomes?

Head-to-head trials in hair loss are limited. Outcomes depend on diagnosis, technique, product quality, and follow-up. Be wary of universal claims.

Are exosome injections legal where I live?

Regulation differs by country and product class. Ask whether the preparation is approved for your indication and traceable to a reputable source.

Should I skip medical therapy and do procedures only?

Many guidelines still prioritise established medical options where appropriate. Procedures may be adjuncts, not automatic replacements.

What if my concern is past surgery quality?

That is a different kind of question — closer to surgical review and transparency. See our HLI vs HairAudit page to see where that fits.

Next steps

Read more on HLI

Explore hubs on causes, blood markers, and treatment planning — written for patients and clinicians who want biology-first context.

When to consider blood tests

If shedding is new, severe, or accompanied by systemic symptoms, structured blood review may be appropriate. HLI can help interpret results you already have or suggest what to discuss with your GP.

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When to book a specialist consult

Rapid progression, scarring signs, pain, or uncertainty after initial tests are reasons many people choose a dedicated consultation for sequencing and clarity.

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When HairAudit is the better destination

If your primary question is surgical transparency, audit, or procedural due diligence, HairAudit focuses on that pathway within the Hair Intelligence ecosystem.

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