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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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Women Lose It, Too: The Causes of Female-Pattern Hair Loss
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The Psychological Impact of Hair Loss
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Herbal Supplements: Can They Fight Hair Loss?
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Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow: The Causes of Male Pattern Baldness
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Can Your Diet Help You Keep Your Hair?
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Genetics and Hair Loss
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Medical Treatment Options for Male Baldness
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Hair Transplantation for Men: A Visit to the Operating Room
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Cosmetic Options for Hair Loss
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Hair Growth: Realistic Results
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Beyond Genetics: What Else Can Cause 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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Hair Loss: Know the Facts
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Choosing a Hair Loss Expert
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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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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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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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, Marc Avram MD, Peter S. Halperin MD, David Folk Thomas
Has anyone ever told you that excessive shampooing causes hair loss, or do you think that hair loss only happens after you turn 50? There are a lot of popular myths out there about hair loss, and it's often hard to tell fact from fiction. Join our panelists as they set matters straight.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Welcome to our webcast. I'm David Folk Thomas. Has anyone ever told you that excessive shampooing causes hair loss, or do you think that hair loss only happens after you turn 50? There are a lot of popular myths out there about hair loss, and it's often hard to tell fact from fiction.
Here to set matters straight are two
experts. To my left is Dr. Peter Halperin, he's an
assistant professor in the department of dermatology at Weill Medical
College of Cornell University in New York Hospital. Next to Dr. Halperin
is Dr. Marc Avram. He's the same thing, assistant professor in the
department of dermatology at the Weill Medical College of Cornell
University in New York Hospital. Peter, let me start
with you. One, that male hair loss is genetically passed down from the
maternal side of the family, and I have some concern because my maternal
grandfather didn't have that much hair at the end, so should I
worry? PETER HALPERIN, MD: Hair loss is certainly genetic,
David, no question about it, but not necessarily only through the
mother's side. It comes from both sides.
That's clearly established. DAVID FOLK
THOMAS: Where did this maternal side come from? Has it
been more likely that people whose maternal family side were losing their
hair or bald, that that was passed down, or somebody created that
somewhere? PETER HALPERIN, MD: They just tried to blame one side
of the family versus the other is all I could tell. DAVID FOLK
THOMAS: So I don't necessarily have to worry.
Okay. PETER HALPERIN, MD: That's
right. DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Female hair loss is genetically passed down
from the male parent.
MARC AVRAM, MD: It's an
equal myth hair loss is obviously, as Peter is saying, from both sides of
the family. We still don't know exactly what gene causes
it. We think it's probably several genes, and
it's a combination from both sides of the family that creates each
individual's unique hair loss pattern, so it's not either
the mother or the father, but a combination of generations together making
up each person's hair loss pattern. DAVID FOLK
THOMAS: Marc, sticking with you, what about hair colorings, hair
spray or excessive washing leading to hair loss? MARC AVRAM,
MD: There's no problem washing your hair, combing your
hair, dyeing your hair, shampooing it. I think a lot of people
when they lose hair really have stress about washing their hair, because
they see the hair in the sink, they see the hair in the comb. In
fact, we lose hair every day. We always have. Anyone
with a full head of hair loses 100, 150 hairs a day.
That's normal. The problem with hair loss is not the
hair that you're combing out or shampooing out. The
problem is it's not being replaced normally. What you
should be careful with -- you should be careful about using excessive
chemicals, relaxants, hot combs. There are things that can burn
the hair out and pull the hair out, but everyday shampooing, combing,
blow-drying is not a problem. DAVID FOLK
THOMAS: It just so happens that that's where you end up
seeing more of the effects.
MARC AVRAM, MD:
Sure. DAVID FOLK THOMAS: You don't see them on the
carpet in your home, you see them gathering in the
drain.