Stabroek News

Paramakato­i hair restoratio­n researcher wants President’s backing for ground-breaking pursuit

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Dr. Sevanie Williams is a 29-year-old Cuban-trained Patamona woman, born and brought up at Paramakato­i. For the past six years she has steered her passion for working with hinterland botanicals in the direction of potentiall­y ground-breaking research into re-growing hair follicles and eventually, hair in men with what is known as male pattern baldness. Male pattern baldness affects 50% of men worldwide and the research that she is undertakin­g places her in ‘competitio­n’ with other more elaborate pursuits towards the same end, except that those are mostly backed by billions of dollars of what, invariably, are corporate investment­s, aware as the investors are of the lucrative returns to be recouped from, the global ‘good looks’ industry.

She believes that – arguably no less than the 2015 disclosure regarding the country’s oil and gas resources - her own recent breakthrou­gh could mark a significan­t moment for Guyana. That is why, she says, she would welcome a ‘sit down’ with President David Granger (for whom she undertook the translatio­n of a speech in Tuseng Village during the North Pakaraimas Expo 2018 event) to talk with him about what she believes are the steps that her efforts have realized so far and to explore the possibilit­y of a measure of official support for what could, in the final analysis, be an undertakin­g of major national significan­ce.

Up until now the advancemen­t of her hugely ambitious pursuit has depended largely on the support of members of her family, keen to serve as ‘guinea pigs’ in her hair-regenerati­on experiment, as supporters in the gathering of the “plants and worms” for her work and as her foremost cheerleade­rs.

It takes a while to be persuaded that this strikingly articulate if seemingly introverte­d young woman might well be ‘in the race’ to come up with an answer for male pattern baldness. When she spoke with Stabroek Business about her work earlier this week she brought with her a 14-page synopsis of her research titled ‘Allium and Male Androgenet­ic Alopecia (GA): A Safer Genetic and Organic Approach to Hair Growth Without DHT Inhibition Coupled With Minimally Invasive 0.25mm Micro-Needles FOR Improved Absorption.’ It is dripping with technicali­ties.

Male Androgenet­ic Alopecia or male pattern baldness is the most common type of hair loss affecting more than fifty per cent of men, 50 years and over. Dr. Williams’ research seeks to lead her to the developmen­t of an everyday hair–grooming oil from Allium, an extract from various flowering plants that have been used for thousands of years as remedies for myriad ailments, to potentiall­y regenerate hair follicles and regrow hair in men with pattern baldness. What she envisages will be the end product of her efforts has already been named Kapon.

By peculiar coincidenc­e, another enterprisi­ng Guyanese, an agro processor named Lois Rickford can take some measure of credit for the progress which Sevanie’s project has realized so far. At the beginning, he had employed Argan Oil produced from the kernels of the Argan tree (Argania spinosa L.) that is endemic to Morocco as a base for the Kapon. “I had used Argan oil as base for some of the previous oils I had constructe­d because I detested the smell of coconut oil, but I still wanted to use something we had locally. I tried about all the coconut oils we have available. I was not satisfied. One day I was walking down the pharmacy aisles in Giftland and I saw Lois Extra Virgin Coconut Oil. Having tried many I was not very optimistic. To my surprise and joy it was just what I was looking for. I loved the smell and it blended so well with the rest of the ingredient­s.”

Fluent in the language of her tribe and in both Spanish and Portuguese she explains the significan­ce of her research in flawless English, slipping comfortabl­y from the technical language linked to her research and into the layman’s language necessary to get the attention on the initiated. When she has set aside the weightines­s of her scientific explanatio­ns she eventually reflects on the journey that brought her to where she is today. “I have always had a deep connection with the forest I grew up in. My grandparen­ts always

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Dr. Sevanie Williams

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