Where Are the Published LaserComb Trial Results That Lexington Promised? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Has Lexington fulfilled their promise (that they made over 3 months ago on this very site) by publishing their FDA lasercomb clearance study in any peer reviewed medical journals?

You’re right. A rep for Lexington posted in the comments back in March of this year stating, in part –
We are currently drafting a medical review of the study to be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal. We have every intention of publishing the study and making the full results available for public scrutiny.

I’ve yet to see anything of the sort. We are all waiting…

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Propecia Costs Per Year – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

how long does one need to use propecia to witness the benefits, and does it require continued usage-as in ad infinitum? how much does a yearly prescription cost on average?

Propecia runs between $700-900 / year, plus there are rebates offered by the drug company Merck. Cutting Proscar into 4 pieces will reduce the costs to about 1/3rd, but your doctor will need to be willing to prescribe that to you. Proscar is a prostate medication (finasteride 5mg), while Propecia is the same drug, but in a 1mg pill and FDA approved for the treatment of genetic male pattern hair loss.

There is a generic Proscar available, which also helps cut the cost. A generic Propecia is yet to be available legally in the U.S. due to patent laws.


Inherited Father’s Oily Scalp — Will I Also Have His Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Doctor,

Just a quick question. My cousins and I are curious about the likelihood of us inheriting our fathers’ hair. Our curiosity was piqued after we (all three of us) had sebaceous cysts removed from our scalps in the last year. My father and uncle have also had cysts removed from their heads several times over the decades. Despite the presence of all this sebum (I understand an over-production is related to high-levels of DHT), and the not-so-clinical removal scars, the two men have full heads of jet-black hair – not bad for guys in their seventies!

What we’re asking: we’ve obviously inherited the oily scalps. Is there any relationship between this and a resistance to the effects of DHT with regard to hairloss. I’m 26 and have the same hair-colour and widows-peak hairline as my father. My cousins are in their early thirties and similarly show no sign of baldness. Just curious. Thanks.

These are probably related to different genes, but your probability of inheriting it from the male side of the family may be reasonably expected. I don’t know of any way to tell for sure, so you may just have to wait it out.


Doctors Disagree About Using Combo of Propecia and Rogaine – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I’m a male in my early 20s and I noticed my temples are now going beyond a NW2 and my frontal region seems less dense. I been to my dermatologist and Dr. Bernstein and both advised me to use Rogaine and Propecia. Should I really do that? I’m ok with Propecia but Rogaine is just too much work! Do you think Propecia is enough or should I listen to those doctors? I read on this blog you don’t recommend combo treatment for various reasons. But I been reading on the net that the combo treatment is a good way to go for frontal loss. I’m confused.

There is no correct answer to your inquiry. Opinions differ. I don’t usually recommend Rogaine (minoxidil) for those of your age unless the hair loss can not be controlled on Propecia (finasteride 1mg). For those who stop the loss and get regrowth from daily Propecia, there is no reason to double the medications. When you start minoxidil you become dependent upon it, so I separate the decision, first with Propecia for 8-12 months and then I re-evaluate the situation.

There is nothing wrong with using both medications at the get-go, but you’re going to have to use both for life, and won’t know which medication is providing visible benefits (so stopping one to cut costs, etc, is going to be a risk).

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Can Toppik Fibers Clog Scalp Pores? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Dr. Rassman,
Not sure if you’ve heard of any negative feedback about Toppik fibers, but I’ve been using Toppik for approx. 1 month now just to help camouflage the thinning areas. As we know, not all of the fibers adhere themselves to the hair shaft and many will fall to the scalp. I also use hair spray to keep my hair in place. My question is, will the Toppik fibers on my scalp along with the hair spray on top of the fibers, suffocate the existing hair and also will it keep any new hair from growing due to the possibility of clogging the pores on my scalp?

Note: I don’t use much Toppik, but when I should scratch my scalp in the area where I’ve applied the fibers, I’ve noticed the fibers under my finger nails.

Thank you in advance.


Toppik takes time to get completely out of your hair, possibly a number of good hair washes. If you wash regularly, Toppik should not cause you problems. Clogging a hair pore is highly overrated as a cause of hair problems, as the direction of sebum movement is from the inside out. The sebum in effect keeps the foreign particles out of the pores.

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After 10 Months on Rogaine Foam, My Hair Characteristics Have Changed Drastically – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman,
I actually asked a question on this site before. I’ve been using Rogaine Foam since September 2007, on the back of my head and the hairline. I was 15 then.

My hair was always somewhat thick, and soft. My hairline had been receding and a dermatologist also said that I had a growing bald spot on the back of my head, based on pictures he took. It worked fine, and in January the dermatologist was actually amazed at the results, especially in the bald spot which was practically eliminated by new, albeit smaller hairs.

Now it’s July 2008, almost 10 months later, and my hair has turned from consistently straight and thick to almost two different hairstyles: the back and sides have all become black, and curly. Really curly. And the rest has become thin and weak and lighter than before. My hairline is straight, but right in the center the hair is especially thin and it looks almost liek a second bald spot.

Whereas when I started, no one could notice the bald spot in the back of my head (although some pointed out a receding hairline), everyone can tell that the hair in the front is thinner than normal.

What’s wrong with my hair?

I would need to examine you to understand the variety of problems you are showing in your hair. I’m sorry, but in your case I simply can’t provide much without seeing the problem in person. It sounds like you haven’t seen your dermatologist since January — I’d setup another appointment for a follow-up.




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I Want Hair Transplanted to Grow Forward – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Dr. Rassaman

I’ve never posted on this site before so i’ll try to make this question as understandable as i can.

Im a 33 yr. old male who up until about the age of 25 had a female type looking hairline that grew straight up and backwards very close to my eyebrows like a wall of hair,and hair on the sides of my head in front of the temples that grew very close to my eyebrows that came up to meet my unusually low and thick hairline.However i never liked having a hairline that low and that thick,and quite frankly i never liked that it grew straight up and backwards.It just didnt compliment my face at all.I hated it.The hair behind my hairline grows what seems to be almost straight forward in comparison to the hairline which grew straight back.

When my hairline matured and receded along with the sides leaving only the forward growing (yet thick and still full head looking)hair left it totally changed the way my face looked for the better i was in heaven.But now that hair behind the hairline is starting to recede and thin out badly.

My question is is it possible to receive a hair transplant that only replaces the forward growing hair that was originally behind the hairline and the hair on the temporal area only rather than having to have a full thick straight up and back growing looking hairlne???

I ask this because as foremontioned i never looked good with that full thick straight up and back growing looking hairline and i always force combed my hairline forward and i want to be able to only have that hair back that naturally falls forward and not that straight back and low;wall of hair hairline.All of the hairline transplants photos i’ve seen all look like the Dr. tries to give you back that straight up growing looking hairline when you were a teen which never suited me.But i never find someone whos transplant looks like the hair naturally falls forward without that thick straight up wall of hair hairline…………. Is this possible to achieve at this point in time Dr.????

Thank you for your time,it’s very much appreciated.

Men with window’s peaks or even the juvenile hairline may have hair that does not point in the normal forward direction. I have never seen it as a problem for the hairline reconstruction, but I would be hesitant to make a comment about your unusual hairline without examining you personally. When I do a hair transplant in the frontal hairline, the hair is placed pointing forward parallel to the floor and when I go back further, that angle increases upward slightly. If some of the hair is sticking up, I might conclude that the hairs that point up will just follow the ‘crowd’ of the thick transplant hair and be outweighed.

I’d have to either see you in person or if you have access to a video camera and can upload the video somewhere like Youtube, that’d be a great way for me to see your hair (make sure the lighting is good).

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Get a Scalp Biopsy! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

(female)
Could you please make sure you tell everyone to get a Scalp Biopsy in all of your replys. It took 3 years of different “doctors” before I asked for one. Immediately it determined what type of Baldness I had and I was given appropriate drugs for the diagnosis. Many thanks

Some women have telogen effluviums, diffuse alopecia areata, and other conditions. The use of scalp biopsy for some women is part of the diagnostic work-up. Be sure that the doctor who does it is a dermatologist and works with a good dermatopathologist who knows how to read what he/she sees under the microscope.

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Dutasteride vs Propecia – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Is dutasteride better for treating hair loss than Propecia?

In the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology (Volume 55, Issue 6, December 2006), a 24 week randomized placebo-controlled study compared the two medications. DHT levels went down and testosterone levels went up on dutasteride. The results of this limited study suggested that in high doses, dutasteride had more hair growth than Propecia (finasteride). A total of 416 men were tested. There were more side effects on the higher doses of dutasteride.

This question has come up over and over again. We are waiting for the results of the Korean study to understand the meaning of the above publication. To get to the root of the question of effectiveness, we must know the results of dutasteride over a long time period and we must know the risks. There are reports of not only increased side effects such as more impotence or decreased libido, but there is also a significant impact on sperm count and possibly fertility in men. As there is a long half life of the dutasteride, the reversible nature of decreased sperm counts are not known. I would not suggest that every person rush to get this medication unless Propecia is a failure and there are reasons for trying the alternative. Please note that dutasteride is FDA approved to treat the prostate (marketed as Avodart), but it is not approved to treat hair loss, so it would be off label for the doctor to prescribe it and most doctors will not take the medical-legal risk for this off label use.

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Does Rogaine Foam Cause More Shedding than the Rogaine Liquid? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I have read all over that Rogaine Foam causes vast more amounts of shedding than the liquid form. Is this true or do both cause the same amount of shedding (which of course varies by person)? I would like to know this because both are using the same growth agent in Minidoxil so I do not see how one could cause more shedding then the other. I have used the liquid form of Minidoxil for 2 months and have not experienced great amounts of shedding so I do not want to switch to Rogaine Foam if it will cause alot more.

I have not seen this in my patients, so I can not comment on the shedding comparison between the Rogaine foam and the liquid. If any readers want to share their experience with this, please leave a comment.

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