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Formulation Science · Ingredient Intelligence · 5 min read

Why one botanical is never enough — and what the research says about combining them.

A new study in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology tested three plant extracts — individually and in combination — on human hair follicle cells and live scalp tissue. The combination outperformed each ingredient alone. This is why the formula matters more than the ingredient list.

LARITELLE OLENA LARITELLE May 19, 2026 Ingredient Intelligence
Hair loss operates across multiple pathways simultaneously. A formula that addresses one of them while leaving the others running is not treating the condition. It is treating the label.
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Why one botanical is never enough — and what ...
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The beauty industry has a single-ingredient problem. A serum launches with rosemary as its hero compound. A treatment builds its entire identity around castor oil. A supplement offers one botanical, isolated, at a dose calibrated to appear on a label rather than to produce a biological effect. The marketing logic is clear: one powerful ingredient is a story. A formula is complicated.

The biology disagrees. Hair loss operates across multiple pathways simultaneously — hormonal, circulatory, inflammatory, oxidative, microbiome, energy metabolic. A single-ingredient intervention addresses one pathway while the others continue driving the loss. The formula matters more than any single compound within it. And a new study in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology has just demonstrated, at the cellular and tissue level, exactly why.

Researchers from Pierre Fabre and the University of Geneva tested three plant extracts — Silybum marianum (milk thistle), manganese PCA, and Lespedeza capitata (bush clover) — first individually on human follicle dermal papilla cells, then in combination on live scalp tissue biopsies. Each extract was chosen for a distinct mechanism. The combination was chosen because the mechanisms were complementary rather than redundant. The results confirmed that addressing three pathways simultaneously produces effects that no single pathway intervention replicates.

The Three Mechanisms

What each extract does — and why together is different from alone.

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Silybum marianum — stopping the telogen phase

Milk thistle extract's primary active compound, silymarin, has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties that are well-established in liver medicine. In the follicle context, the study found that Silybum marianum extract specifically reduces Dickkopf-1 (DKK1) secretion — a protein that inhibits the Wnt/β-catenin pathway and signals follicles to enter the telogen (resting) phase prematurely.

DKK1 is one of the key mediators through which DHT signals follicle miniaturisation. By reducing DKK1, milk thistle extract is interrupting the molecular instruction to rest — keeping follicles in growth mode despite the androgenic signal to stop. This is a novel mechanism that complements DHT inhibition without competing with it.

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Lespedeza capitata — stimulating the anagen phase

Bush clover extract activates the Wnt/β-catenin pathway directly — the growth signalling cascade that instructs follicle stem cells to migrate and initiate a new growth cycle. It also upregulates VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor), driving the formation of new blood vessels around follicles and increasing nutrient and oxygen delivery to the follicle matrix.

This is the active growth stimulation that complements milk thistle's telogen inhibition. One stops the follicle from resting prematurely. The other actively initiates the growth phase. Together they address both ends of the hair cycle simultaneously — something no single-pathway ingredient achieves.

Manganese PCA — promoting follicle anchoring

Manganese PCA addresses a third, distinct mechanism: follicle anchoring. It increases versican secretion by dermal papilla cells — a proteoglycan component of the extracellular matrix that physically anchors the follicle in the dermis and reduces the ease with which it can be displaced into shedding. Weak follicle anchoring is a contributor to increased shedding during telogen effluvium and in androgenetically miniaturising follicles.

This is the structural component that the growth stimulators above do not address. You can inhibit telogen, stimulate anagen, and increase VEGF — but if the follicle's structural anchoring in the dermis is compromised, the strand sheds before completing its cycle. Manganese PCA closes the loop that the other two extracts opened.

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Complementary mechanisms — telogen inhibition, anagen stimulation, follicle anchoring — each requiring a different botanical to address
Ex vivo
Tested on live human scalp biopsies — not just cell culture — confirming the combined effects in tissue that behaves like the actual scalp
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Of the three mechanisms are addressed by any currently approved pharmaceutical for hair loss — confirming the complementary value of botanical formulation

The Formulation Principle

Why the combination produces effects the ingredients don't produce alone.

The study's most important finding is not what any single extract does. It is that the three extracts together address pathways that are mechanistically distinct and mutually reinforcing.

Stopping premature telogen (milk thistle) buys time for the anagen signal (bush clover) to arrive and be acted upon. The Wnt/β-catenin activation from bush clover produces the growth instruction, but that instruction requires a structurally sound follicle anchor (manganese PCA) to be acted upon completely. Remove any one of the three and the other two are less effective. Together, they create a condition for hair growth that none of them creates alone.

This is the argument for formulation over single ingredients — stated not as marketing but as mechanism.

The Laritelle formulation philosophy

Every ingredient in a Laritelle formula was selected for a specific mechanism — and chosen because that mechanism complements rather than duplicates the mechanisms of every other ingredient in the formula.

Rosemary for IGF-1 and microcirculation. Ginger for VEGF and blood vessel formation. Lavender for cortisol modulation and follicle count increase. Clary sage for phytoestrogenic support and sebum regulation. Bhringaraj for DHT inhibition and follicle cycling. Green tea for mitochondrial protection. Patchouli for microbiome balance and inflammation. Clove bud for antimicrobial support and collagen synthesis.

Eight ingredients. Eight distinct mechanisms. Zero redundancy. This is what clinical aromatherapy formulation looks like when it is done by practitioners who understand the biology, not by marketing teams who understand the label.

What This Exposes

The ingredient-as-product model and why it consistently underdelivers.

The hair care market is full of products built around a single hero ingredient at whatever concentration makes the label compelling and the formulation cost manageable. This approach has commercial logic — a story is simpler to sell than a system. But it consistently produces incomplete results for a fundamental biological reason.

Hair loss is not a single-pathway condition. The senescence atlas mapped five simultaneous cellular failures. The million-user dataset identified three independent predictor categories. The gut-hair axis research confirmed a fourth system. The perimenopause research identified five simultaneous drivers in a single population.

A rosemary serum addresses IGF-1 and circulation. It does not address DKK1-driven telogen entry, follicle anchoring degradation, cortisol-driven HPA axis suppression, microbiome dysbiosis, or gut hormone metabolism. The rosemary is doing its job. The job is insufficient.

Single-ingredient product
Mechanism addressed
Mechanisms left unaddressed
Rosemary serum
IGF-1, microcirculation
DHT, cortisol, microbiome, anchoring, telogen inhibition, VEGF
Castor oil
Prostaglandin E2, circulation
DHT, estrogen, cortisol, inflammation, stem cell signalling
Minoxidil
Vasodilation, anagen extension
DHT, hormones, cortisol, microbiome, energy metabolism, anchoring
Biotin supplement
B7 if deficient
Everything else — most people are not deficient
Laritelle Fertile Roots
DHT, estrogen, cortisol, circulation, VEGF, IGF-1, microbiome, inflammation, anchoring, oxidative stress
Multi-pathway by design — formulated by practitioners who mapped the full cascade

How to read an ingredient list — and what to look for instead.

The question to ask of any hair loss product is not "does it contain X?" It is "what are the distinct mechanisms this formula addresses, and does it address enough of them to change the biological environment the follicle is operating in?"

A product that lists rosemary and includes it at cosmetic fragrance concentration is not a rosemary product. A product that lists rosemary, ginger, lavender, bhringaraj, clary sage, green tea, patchouli, and clove bud — each at therapeutic concentration, each tested by GC spectrometry, each chosen for a specific mechanism — is a different category of product entirely.

The ingredient list is not the formula. The formula is the relationship between the ingredients — the complementary mechanisms, the delivery system, the concentration discipline, and the clinical understanding of what needs to be addressed for the follicle environment to actually change.

One botanical is never enough. The right formula, consistently applied, is.

Not what is in the bottle.
What the bottle is actually for.

Eight mechanisms. One formula. Daily.

Every Laritelle ingredient was chosen for a specific complementary mechanism — tested for therapeutic concentration, formulated by practitioners, applied consistently.

→ Explore the Fertile Roots Collection
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