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A Tour around Hair Loss
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A Tour around Hair Loss
(Date of publication 11 May 2005)
Hair loss or alopecia in men is widely regarded as a suitable topic for
one-liners such as "I knew I was going bald when it took longer and longer to
wash my face". This is hardly surprising considering the effort and ingenuity
that goes into disguising follicular shortcomings. For example, in 1975 the
American Patents Office registered a special way of combing hair for bald
people! It is all to do with layering and hairspray, apparently. However,
seeing handfuls of hair gather conspiratorially in the plughole after
shampooing can be a very traumatic experience, which also affects
women.
Scalp hair grows at a rate of about 1 centimetre per month for
two to six years (the anagen phase), before entering a resting or telogen phase
that lasts two or three months, and then falling out. At any given time, some
90% of the hair is actively growing. This page gives a very brief account of
the major causes of excessive hair loss, including genetic predisposition,
illness, hormonal changes, infection, medication, and improper hair
care.
Genetic, or androgenic, alopecia is the most common cause of hair
loss; it may begin as early as 20 in men, with two thirds of Caucasian males
becoming noticeably bald before 40, while 30% of Caucasian females are affected
before the menopause. This photograph shows typical male pattern baldness; the
hair starts receding at the temples to give an 'M-shaped' hairline, whilst
simultaneously thinning at the crown. Eventually the two depleted areas meet
and coalesce, leaving just a horseshoe-shape of hair around the sides of the
head. Female pattern baldness, as here, comprises a general thinning of hair
all over the head, sometimes with a moderate loss at the hairline.
The
causes of androgenic baldness are complex and incompletely understood, but
involve both hormonal and genetic factors. The reaction of the hair follicles
to testosterone and its more potent derivative dihydrotestosterone (DHT) plays
an important role, but the speed, pattern, time of onset and degree of balding
are all influenced by heredity. This site also includes information about the
prescription medications minoxidil and finasteride, which have been shown to
slow the rate of hair loss and stimulate new hair growth in some patients with
this type of alopecia.
Physiological stresses such as febrile illness,
major surgery, hormonal changes, pregnancy, anorexia and medication can cause a
large number of hairs to simultaneously switch from the anagen phase to the
telogen phase. Approximately three months after the precipitating event these
hairs are shed; this form of alopecia is termed telogen effluvium. Body hair is
not usually affected hair is lost diffusely from the entire scalp but
complete alopecia is not seen. In both this photograph and in this one you can
see diffuse thinning over the entire scalp with a pronounced widening of the
parting. Providing any underlying causes are corrected, the condition is
totally reversible, usually within about 6 months.
During the anagen
phase, the matrix cells of the hair follicle undergo vigorous mitotic activity.
Radiotherapy and chemotherapeutic agents used to treat cancer have a profound
impact on cell division in these cells, leading to a weakened hair shaft
susceptible to fracture, or even to a complete failure of hair formation. This
is anagen effluvium. Diffuse hair loss usually begins 7 14 days after
exposure to chemotherapy, but is most apparent after 1 2 months, and can
be quite extensive, as here. Again the condition is completely reversible, but
the new growth may differ from the original hair in colour and texture. At the
bottom if this page there is a good section on differentiating anagen effluvium
from telogen effluvium.
It is quite common to see people with a few
small, bare patches of scalp, although not generally as extensive as this.
These are the result of alopecia areata, an autoimmune condition in which the
white blood cells attack hair follicles. On rare occasions it progresses to
produce a total loss of head hair or even the loss of all head, face and body
hair. The cause is unknown, but it is thought that a genetic predisposition is
triggered by a viral infection or environmental factor. The course of the
disease is unpredictable; some people lose a few patches of hair, which later
grows back, and the condition never recurs. In others the hair never re-grows,
or there is continual loss and re-growth, and sometimes the new growth is
white, gradually assuming the colour and texture of the original. Research is
focused on areas such as gene-mapping, new therapeutic agents, drug delivery
and understanding stem cell biology.
Placing excessive tensional forces
on hair shafts, as a result of styling practices such as braiding or pigtails,
can lead to focal hair loss. This is traction alopecia and the area affected
depends on the way the hair is being pulled. If the condition is ignored,
scarring and permanent hair loss may result over much of the
scalp.
Various surgical techniques are available to replace hair when
re-growth is not possible, including transplantation, flap repositioning,
tissue expansion and scalp reduction. These are explained on this plastic
surgery site, complete with diagrams, and prospective patients are warned that
follow-up procedures are often required to improve the aesthetic result. To get
a better appreciation of transplantation have a look at the animations and
videos of two procedures (follicular unit strip excision and follicular unit
extraction) here. For men, however, perhaps the best solution is simply to
shave off what little hair remains it is much cheaper, and the totally
bald pate is currently deemed the epitome of cool.........but for how long?
Read books on Hair Loss -
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This medical briefing was written by
Derrick Garwood, a Freelance Medical Writer and Editor, and first published, on
this same date, in the series of InPharm Tours at
InPharm.com. It is
reproduced here with permission from the publishers.
The links presented here were accurate at the time of
publication, but remember that information on the Web has a tendancy to change
without notice! |
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