Hair Loss InformationRogaine Made Me Gain Weight – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am 42 yrs (female) and have been experiencing hair loss at the front of my head to the middle I’m of african descent with natural hair. I try all products that encourage re-growth with no results. Using rogaine made me gain weight and I also suffer from anxiety. Can you help?

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I’ve never had any patient of mine report weight gain as a side effect of Rogaine (minoxidil), but it may be a side effect of your stress. As you are a woman, Rogaine would be the only medication I’d recommend, as it is the only one FDA approved to treat female hair loss.

Hair Loss Information2 Weeks After Surgery and My Transplanted Hairs Haven’t Fallen Out Yet – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’m two weeks post op and I’m almost positive that I haven’t lost a single transplanted hair yet. I’m hoping that these little guys are going to stay in my head and continue to grow out with the rest of my hair. Is it possible to that the shedding stage can be avoided sometimes and the transplants grow out? If shedding is inevitable I’d like to speed up the process. Would it be beneficial to pluck the small guys so they can start their regret stage sooner? Thanks again for all your help!

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The transplanted grafts often stay in for 2-4 weeks. If they grow past 3/8 inch and keep on growing, they will most likely stay. That happens in about 5% of patients. Leave them alone, ignore them and just wait it out.

Propecia and Dandruff – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Can Propecia cause dandruff? I’ve been talking it for a couple months now and it seems to be working, but I’m noticing dandruff that I have never had before. Maybe its just a coincidence?

Sounds like it could be a coincidence. Wait it out and treat your dandruff the way everyone else does.

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Is the Consensus About Avodart for Hair Loss Mostly Positive? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Doc:

I notice that you don’t make many (if any) references to Avodart / dutasteride as an effective medication for hairloss any more. I realize that it’s not FDA approved for this use and perhaps you have some liability issues, but is the general consensus within the hair replacement community that it’s effective?

Thanks!

I can not comment on the hair transplant community as a whole. Maybe after the annual ISHRS convention in October, I will be able to report on a consensus. I had a patient yesterday who reported going from Propecia to Avodart and he did notice a complete loss of libido on the Avodart, something that he only had a mild experience with while on Propecia. I am under the impression that the DHT block is much more extensive in Avodart. I am hesitant to recommend or endorse the use of this product for treating hair loss in men unless I had some unique conditions such as the presence of diffuse unpatterned alopecia in a male that has not responded to finasteride (I don’t recommended drugs that do not have FDA clearance for treating hair loss routinely) — but if the DHT blocking in Avodart is better than Propecia, then I’d assume that equates to more protection from hair loss. Maybe it is worth another look at it for men who are losing ground on finasteride.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

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I’m a Satisfied ScalpMed User – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I am a scalpmed user. I have had fantastic results with this product. NONE of the other products on the market did anything to Grow hair. I noticed some hair coming out the first 3 weeks of Scalpmed use, but they were replaced by thicker hair shafts from the same spot. Now there is less and less hair loss and my head is filling up with hair. I absolutely cannot deny the truth that my bald spot is flat gone. I would be glad to provide you pictures of before and after.

I’m posting this without seeing any photographic proof, but would love to see such proof through a good third party source. I have no way to determine if this is a real user response or a company plant. The reason for my doubts is that the response here has not been typical of the many responses I have received about ScalpMed. Regardless, I’d be interested in seeing those pictures — you can send them to the email address on the Contact page. Thanks.

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Hair Loops – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I have a few hairs that are stuck into the skin at both ends (they look like the loops of shoe laces). What should I do about this?

If there is a lock of hair with both ends in the skin, put a needle below the loop (not in the skin) and pull up on it. The loose end will come free and the secure end will stay. You do not need to have one of our staff do this for you.

18 Year Old With White Hair – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi, im an 18 year old male. I have thick hair and 40% of my hair are white. is there anyway to pervent white hair? its pretty embarrassing. My head starting itching a lot starting last year, dandruff exposes when i scratch my scalp. i started using scalpicin, but it only makes the itch go away for few hours. I seriously claw my head sometimes and feel like my head bleeds. ive been getting some pimples on the side of my head. i pop them sometimes to get rid of them. i take showers everyday, im healthy, i got short hair, i got smooth skin. i just have white hair, few pimples and late night scalp itch. What the hell is going on… im only 18.

The pimples may be the result of the ‘clawing’ you are doing. Breaking the skin makes you a set-up for folliculitis (which causes pimples). White hair is genetically controlled. I have seen many people turn white early in life. When that happens, hair dyes are the way to manage the process. Get a professional stylist who is skilled in this process and your gray will be washed away. It will require frequent applications to maintain the new color. There is no permanent solution to going gray or white prematurely. The frequency of dying depends upon the growth rate. The average person grows 1/2 inch per month and the roots of the gray new hair will start to show in a week or so. Then, once you understand the rate of growth the the ‘root showing’ issue, you can make up a schedule for repeat dying of the hair.

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Hair Loss InformationHow Propecia Works on Hair and Why Miniaturization Mapping is Important – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Authors: Price VH , Menefee E, Sanchez M, Kaufman KD. Department of Dermatology, University of California, San Francisco published an article in the J Am Acad Dermatol. 2006 Jul;55(1):71-4. Epub 2006 May 3.

This is an important article which shows the impact of finasteride (Propecia) on the miniaturization process. It is clear from this study that Propecia produces much of its value by reversing the miniaturization process, making the hair shafts thicker, more so than growing new hair follicles. That is why it works well in people who still have hair that is being impacted by the genetic balding process, while being minimally effective in those men who lost most of their hair. The article concluded:

“CONCLUSION: Long-term finasteride treatment led to sustained improvement in hair weight compared with placebo. Hair weight increased to a larger extent than hair count, implying that factors other than the number of hairs, such as increased growth rate (length) and thickness of hairs, contribute to the beneficial effects of finasteride in treated men.”

I know that many of my readers may be tired of the constant references to mapping out the scalp for miniaturization. This scientific study, by a prestigious university, shows that the degree of miniaturization in the drug treatment for hair loss is where the benefits lie. Mapping the scalp absolutely shows from ‘whence your hair came to where your hair is going’. The measurements of miniaturization is the diagnostic backbone for the diagnosis of genetic balding, particularly when it occurs in patterns (male pattern balding or MPB). Even female genetic hair loss has distinctive patterns of miniaturization and the skilled diagnostician who commands that knowledge, is more effective in giving advice and building the Master Plan that I keep talking about. The doctor should:

  1. make the diagnosis by mapping the scalp and analyzing miniaturization
  2. document the pattern of hair loss and miniaturization
  3. use his/her knowledge to predict what should happen when a person is treated with drugs on miniaturized hairs
  4. observe what happens when the drug is used on the miniaturized hairs by repeating the mapping process periodically over time
  5. build a Master Plan based upon the degree of miniaturization and its response to drugs and/or time
  6. get to know the patient and his/her goals
  7. evaluate the transplant option when appropriate
  8. learn how the treatments (transplants or drugs) impacts the patient’s goals and the balding process based upon successive scalp mappings, and
  9. re-evaluate the Master Plan based upon the knowledge of what has happened in 1-8 above.

This 9 step process is the standard of care today and anything less than this is less than what every hair loss victim should accept.

Too many times, readers of this blog tell me that they have gone to their doctors and asked to have their hair mapped out for miniaturization and the doctors they speak with essentially call mapping ‘hogwash’ or BS. As you can see from what I wrote here and the published article I referenced above, mapping out the scalp for miniaturization is possibly the most important part of the doctor’s evaluation of hair loss. Too many doctors look at the scalp hair, run their hands through it and make a diagnosis and a recommendation based upon a naked eye evaluation (as if to suggest that there is a microcope on the ends of their fingers), but this approach brings no sophistication, little added value, and no clinical science to the ‘hocus pocus’ that has been associated with hair loss and its diagnosis. The standard of care dictates that the 9 step process outlined above is the basic minimum a patient should expect when he/she visits an expert in hair loss. The metrics of miniaturization is the foundation for the clinical diagnosis of hair loss.

Minoxidil Is Making Me Hairy! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I started minoxidil 2 months ago and it is working miricles on the back of my head. The problem is that it is now hair growing on my back and the hair on on my arms and legs is getting thicker, much thicker. I am growing hair all over my body, even the chest is hairier. When I looked at my arms, there is probably no new hair, but the hairs on my arms are definately thicker. Could I be imagining this? Is this possible?

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Yes, this is a known, but rare side effect of minoxidil with topical applications. It was a finding that was more consistent when the drug was given in a pill form for the treatment of high blood pressure (that was its original use). I suspect that you are absorbing considerable amounts of minoxidil into your body through the skin. Skin applications of medications are not new. Testosterone is administered as a patch and so are many other medications. The skin is an excellent route for bringing drugs into the body. Your dilemma is simply to accept the new body hair along with the benefits in the crown of your head, or stop the drug and wait for it to back to your original, normal state.

Length of Hair and Miniaturization? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello, my question is this. Ive recently been take propecia but ive noticed my scalp gettin really itchy. Is that normal. One more question. If your hair is balding. Dont your hair folicules get smaller every time that they fall out. Because they get smaller they can only go to a certain length, then they just fall out again? Am i right, or would you be able to grow your hair out to a length u wanted without the hair falling out? Id hate to grow my hair and it all fall out.

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There is a good point in your questions. When hair shows miniaturization and the hair shafts get thinner, the hair stops growing to its normal length. I suspect that the length it grows to will reflect the amount of miniaturization. The more miniaturization, the less the hair length. Many men with advanced miniaturization of the frontal hairs will notice that the hair does not grow at all. It may stay there for a few years, but eventually the hair that is not growing will fall out. The normal cycling of the hair is what is producing this problem. Hair that is not growing is not cycling into its sleep phase (telogen), and when it does go into a sleep phase, some of it may not grow back. The itchy complaint may be something that has to be evaulated by a doctor who understands skin problems. Too many possibilities to address over the internet.