i had a Ht in feb ypu think it will be a good idea to use mederma a scar product to make it look less visable….let me know thanks
I never recommend Mederma, but some people believe in it, so perhaps it has some value. I personally don’t think so.
i had a Ht in feb ypu think it will be a good idea to use mederma a scar product to make it look less visable….let me know thanks
I never recommend Mederma, but some people believe in it, so perhaps it has some value. I personally don’t think so.
Today is the last day in our Pico Blvd office in Los Angeles. We’re moving to a beautiful and completely remodeled office space in a medical building in Century City (just a few blocks down the road). Starting April 28, 2008, our NHI Los Angeles office will be:
2080 Century Park East, Suite 607
Los Angeles, CA 90067
Our first Open House in the new office will be next Saturday, May 3rd from noon-2pm. If you’re able to attend, I welcome you to stop by to see the new place — and of course, to meet with patients, have a free consultation with myself or Dr. Pak, and to see a live hair transplant surgery.
Anyway, I’ll post some photos of our new place once things get settled. In the meantime, things have been busy with the move (anyone that has moved to a new home in the past can surely attest to that — and moving an office is just like moving a home, except with more computers and surgical equipment), but I’ll make a point to have the blog updated in the same frequency as you’ve come to expect!
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If I may piggy-back on the previous inquiry regarding loss of sensitivity of the scalp and hair loss. 3 weeks ago I underwent a brow and face lift and now the top and sides of my head are totally numb. I also cannot get my hair to lay the way it did previously…it’s like it’s developed a totaly new growth pattern and new cowlicks that make the hair impossible to manage… My surgeon says it may take 3-4 months for the feeling to come back. he can’t comment on my hair except to be patient. Is this sort of development to be expected? What should I do?
Your doctor is probably correct. You must wait this process out. If it does not get better, then be sure to speak with your doctor further. Brow lifts can cause changes in hair growth because of scarring and the pull on the existing hair, reduction of thickness of the hair shaft caused by blood supply problems, and the inducement of genetic changes that may be programmed and not ‘expressed’ without the brow lift. There are probably other factors, but I do not believe that anyone knows them all.
hello dr rassman,
first thank you for your help. i found this on some hair loss forum.L-carnitine-L-tartrate promotes human hair growth in vitro
Source: Experimental Dermatology, Nov 2007
Thank you for sending this. This is an interesting read. It is important to recognize that things that work outside the body do not necessarily work inside the body. Pinpointing these stimulants has value in ongoing research.
I recently pulled out a few hairs at the front hairline and noticed some were thinner than others.I did the same at the back of my head where the hair meets the neck and found the same thing. Are there different thickness hairs all over your head or is this miniturization? I dont understand as i thought the hair that meets the neck could not be lost?? Is it normal to have some thinner hairs all the way round the head where the hairline starts??
Thanks for a great site, your help is much appreciated!
Generally, if there is no miniaturization (no balding) present, most hair on your scalp will have the same thickness except for:
Dr. Rassman,
First off thank you for taking the time to answer all of our questions.
My question is, do you think that the severity of hair loss depends on the number of genes for hair loss that someone has? In other words, do you think that someone whose father has perfect hair with a mothers side with hair loss will not begin to lose their hair until mid age. Whereas someone with a bald father and balding mothers side of the family will lose at an early age? I ask this because I made the observation on people I know. It seems to me that men who lose their hair in their early 20s almost always have a balding father. Anyone I know with a father with flawless hair and a balding maternal grandfather and uncles seems to begin losing at mid age (if ever).
Do you survey your patients? In other words, do you ask them what their family history of hair loss has been?
Yes, I always ask patients about their balding family history. I have not noted what you have, so I can not comment on it directly. There is no detectable connection that I have observed between balding fathers and the age their sons start balding. When both sides of the family have balding, the frequency of balding in sons does increase.
Okay I read when you said that dandruff cannot cause hair loss, but I also read that dandruff is related to an increase in the amount of sebum on the scalp, which presmuably is caused by increased testosterone? All this together seems like dandruff is a sign of pending hair loss…
Sebum is an oily secretion of the sebaceous gland which helps to preserve the flexibility of the hair and to protect it from the environment (source: MedicineNet.com). It is NOT “presumably” caused by increased testosterone. The human body is much too complicated to make these cause and effect correlations. In the end, what are you really asking me? Are your asking me if your hair loss is caused by dandruff or if people with dandruff have hair loss?
The most common cause of hair loss in men is due to genetic balding. You can thank your mother or father, not your dandruff. People with hair and people who are balding all can have dandruff.
I’m writing on behalf of my mother in law, a 59 year old african american woman. Her hair never seems to grow and she hasn’t gotten a haircut in a long, long while. Can I get your thoughts on “Short Hair Syndrome”? This sounds like what my she is dealing with, but I can’t find any further info on it. Is it even real? The site is http://www.lisaakbari.com/SHS.html

From a medical point of view, or as a physician involved in hair loss for over 15 years, I do not recall ever hearing or reading about “Short Hair Syndrome”… but I can logically give you an explanation for it, assuming the the examination of the hair and scalp is normal and there are no medical problems lingering behind the scene.
First, I will assume that she has no miniaturization going on throughout the scalp. If she does, then short hairs will come about when the hair miniaturizes so that a diagnosis needs to be established. With respect to your mother-in-law whose hair is not growing much, she may have a very short anagen phase (growth phase) of the hair cycle. A short growth phase could produce healthy, but short hairs. Of course, she should see a dermatologist or her primary care physician to see if there are medical issues that are causing such problems.
I have a question. A couple of years ago I lost a bit of hair around the temples but this process seems to have no progress at all. I shave my head.. well only to about 3mm, have very thick hair. My question is as follows, If I got these temples fixed to get a straight hairline would a buzz cut be appropriate ? would it look natural ? I’d be grateful for your reply.

Frontal hair loss can be fixed to near-perfection with a hair transplant, provided that you are a candidate for it. That would include such checklist items as:
If you come to any of our free monthly open house events, you will meet some men who have completely replaced the frontal hairline to what I call perfection.
Although this post isn’t hair loss related and it is about an article that is nearly 2 years old, this is an important read for those who buy into the antioxidant solution to anti-aging, heart disease, stroke, cancer, and the like. The question raised here is whether you can get these antioxidants from pills or do you have to get them from fresh fruits and vegetables?
Snippet from the article:
Cranberry capsules. Green tea extract. Effervescent vitamin C. Pomegranate concentrate. Beta carotene. Selenium. Grape seed extract. High-dose vitamin E. Pine bark extract. Bee spit.
You name it, if it’s an antioxidant, we’ll swallow it by the bucket-load. According to some estimates around half the adults in the US take antioxidant pills daily in the belief they promote good health and stave off disease. We have become antioxidant devotees. But are they doing us any good? Evidence gathered over the past few years shows that at best, antioxidant supplements do little or nothing to benefit our health. At worst, they may even have the opposite effect, promoting the very problems they are supposed to stamp out.

Full text at NewScientist — The antioxidant myth: a medical fairy tale