|
Please select from the list of medical conditions from the below drop-down list:
|
Alopecia (Baldness)
There are many types of alopecia, each with a different cause. Alopecia may be localized to the front and top of the head as in common male pattern baldness. It may be patchy as in a condition called alopecia areata, or it can involve the entire head as in alopecia capitis totalis.
There are many kinds of hair loss, including what we call:
All of these types of hair loss can be alarming but, fortunately, they are most often mild and temporary or reversible.
The majority of people who lose their hair, however, do it gradually and all through the scalp, with some emphasis on the frontal part. Doctors refer to this process as "androgenetic alopecia" which implies that a combination of hormones (andro-) and heredity (genetics) is needed to develop the condition. Hair Loss in MenWhat causes hair loss in men?
Some men never go "bald", but everyone''s hair thins out over the years. Despite much research, there is still only a little that men can do to slow down or reverse hair loss. Sometimes acute stress to the system (such as high fever, sudden weight loss, etc.) produces a sudden, rapid shedding of hair, where you find clumps of hair coming out all over the place. Although this syndrome is alarming, it actually is good news, because the body readjusts itself and most if not all the hair grows back. People whose loss of hair is inherited notice their hair is thinning but do not see very much hair actually coming out. Once you think you are thinning, it is worth a check to be sure.
Clearing up the "Myths"
What treatments are there for hair loss in men?
To slow down hair loss, you have two options:
Note: Stopping either Rogaine or Propecia puts you back where you would have been without them, but not worse off. Hair Loss in WomenIs hair loss in women different than men?
Hair loss in women also has an inherited (genetic) basis, but not as much as men, and the loss is not as fast. Also, women tend not to have big bald spots; in general women''s frontal hairline remains and thinning tends to be distributed throughout the scalp. Like men, when women first notice that their hair is thinner than it used to be (which can be in their early 20''s in some families), they assume the process will leave them bald, when in fact it usually takes many years for thinning to become obvious to others.
Women start losing their hair later in life and almost never lose the frontal hairline, no matter how thin their hair gets (this is called female-pattern baldness.) All of us develop thinning of our hair as we age. |