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Hair Growth: Realistic Results
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The Psychological Impact of Hair Loss
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Beyond Genetics: What Else Can Cause Hair Loss?
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Herbal Supplements: Can They Fight Hair Loss?
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Hair Transplantation Techniques
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Getting Over the Hurdle: Helping Men Talk About Hair Loss
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Beyond Hair Plugs: Modern Surgical Options For Hair Loss in Men
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Medical Treatments for Hair Loss in Women
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Medical Treatments for Female Hair Loss
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Hair Loss: Know the Facts
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Choosing a Hair Loss Expert
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Can Your Diet Help You Keep Your Hair?
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Debunking Hair Loss Myths
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Treating Hair Loss: Over-the-Counter vs. Prescription
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Using Cloning Techniques In Hair Transplantation
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Genetics and Hair Loss
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Hair Loss Treatment: What Works?
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The Biology of Hair Loss
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How Hair Loss Medicines Work
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Current Medical Treatments for Hair Loss
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Proven and Unproven Treatments for Hair Loss
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Women Lose It, Too: The Causes of Female-Pattern Hair Loss
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Cloning: The Future's Answer to Hair Loss
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From Hair Care to Cloning: Non-Medical Treatments for Hair Loss in Women
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Unlocking the Genetics of Hair Loss
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Cosmetic Options for Hair Loss
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Alopecia simply means hair loss (baldness).
Hair loss occurs for a great many reasons—from pulling it out to having it killed off by cancer chemotherapy. Some causes are considered natural, while others signal serious health problems. Some conditions are confined to the scalp. Others reflect disease throughout the body. Being plainly visible, the skin and its components can provide early signs of disease elsewhere in the body.
Oftentimes, conditions affecting the skin of the scalp will result in hair loss. The first clue to the specific cause is the pattern of hair loss, whether it be complete baldness (alopecia totalis), patchy bald spots, thinning, or hair loss confined to certain areas. Also a factor is the condition of the hair and the scalp beneath it. Sometimes only the hair is affected; sometimes the skin is visibly diseased as well.
Dermatologists are skilled in diagnosis by sight alone. For more obscure diseases, they may have to resort to a skin biopsy, removing a tiny bit of skin using a local anesthetic so that it can examined under a micro-scope. Systemic diseases will require a complete evaluation by a physician, including specific tests to identify and characterize the problem.
Successful treatment of underlying causes is most likely to restore hair growth, be it the completion of chemotherapy, effective cure of a scalp fungus, or control of a systemic disease. Two relatively new drugs—minoxidil (Rogaine) and finasteride (Proscar)—promote hair growth in a significant minority of patients, especially those with male pattern baldness and alopecia areata. While both drugs have so far proved to be quite safe when used for this purpose, minoxidil is a liquid that is applied to the scalp and finasteride is the first and only approved treatment in a pill form.
Minoxidil was approved for over-the-counter sales in 1996. When used continuously for long periods of time, minoxidil produces satisfactory results in about one quarter of patients with androgenic alopecia and as many as half the patients with alopecia areata. There is also an over-the-counter extra-strength version of minoxidil (5% concentration) approved for use by men only. The treatment often results in new hair that is thinner and lighter in color. It is important to note that new hair stops growing soon after the use of minoxidil is discontinued.
Over the past few decades there have appeared a multitude of hair replacement methods performed by both physicians and non-physicians. They range from simply weaving someone else's hair in with the remains of your own to surgically transplanting thousands of hair follicles one at a time.
Hair transplantation is completed by taking tiny plugs of skin, each containing one to several hairs, from the back side of the scalp. The bald sections are then implanted with the plugs. Research completed in 2000 looked at the new technique of hair grafting, and found that micrografts (one to two hairs transplanted per follicle) resulted in fewer complications and the best results
Another surgical procedure used to treat androgenic alopecia is scalp reduction. By stretching skin the hairless scalp can be removed and the area of bald skin decreased by closing the space with hair-covered scalp. Hair-bearing skin can also be folded over an area of bald skin with a technique called a flap.
The prognosis varies with the cause. It is generally much easier to lose hair than to regrow it. Even when it returns, it is often thin and less attractive than the original.
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Author Info: Beth Kapes, The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine, 2002 |