Is My Propecia Expired? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hey doctor, I have 1 year old propecia sitting in my drawer. I am wondering if it is still safe to take the drug or will it loose all effectiveness? I cannot find any expiration date on the package. Thank you.

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The Propecia bottle should have an expiration date stamped towards the bottom of the front label, right next to the lot number.

In the event that you find the date and discover it has passed, you shouldn’t be using expired drugs (I would say the same about expired bread or milk). While it may not harm you, the effectiveness of the drug may be diminished.

I Don’t Trust My Doctor After He Recommended Rogaine and the Laser Comb – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Doctor Rassman, first let me start off by thanking you for running the balding blog the way you do. Its the only real source for hair loss questions/answers that I trust in terms of reliability and i would be lost without it.

I am a 23 year old male who noticed a bit of a “wider part” and “larger cowlick” around 2 years ago. I’d wager I’ve thinned a bit since then, but i still have full coverage with no pure bald spots, thinning primarily noticable in the crown region. I took propecia for 8 months and then, like an idiot quit the medication out of fear it was doing nothing and i was throwing money away. approx. 4 months later I realized the thinning sped up so now I am taking the medicine again. I don’t really trust my prescribing doctor’s knowledge…he recommended using the laser comb and rogaine before I attempted propecia but I was persistent.

my questions:
1. Who can map my hair for miniaturization in my surrounding area?
2. assuming I will end up a norwood 6(like my father)what type of coverage could a transplant offer me if we assumed I had average scalp laxticity and average hair density?
3. Do you believe there will be breakthroughs in the next decade that will prevent most of my generation from being forced to live their lives as bald men?

Thanks again for this site

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We have written in the past about the LaserComb — basically, we don’t feel it works for treating hair loss. Rogaine, however, is an option if you are persistent enough to apply it twice a day, everyday. In my opinion, most men are horrible at keeping to a regimen and it is a factor you must consider when starting any daily routine like this.

Thank you for sharing your experience on Propecia. It seems that you experienced “catch up” hair loss after stopping the medication. While you will not gain what you lost, restarting the medication was probably a good idea.

Now to answer your questions —

  1. On the east coast, I would trust Dr. Bernstein in New York. He was with New Hair Institute until he branched off to start his own clinic and he’ll be able to map your scalp for miniaturization.
  2. Coverage really depends on your hair character + hair/skin color contrast. If you’ve got black hair, white skin, and a very fine hair character… you won’t have good coverage. If you’ve got thick blonde wavy hair, you’ll have better luck.
  3. Certainly there is work being done and there is a huge market for it, but what you’re asking about is essentially a cure for hair loss. While I do hope something happens within the next decade, I really have no way of knowing if the current work being done is the answer we’re all looking for. Keep your fingers crossed, but your expectations realistic.

So Finasteride and Rogaine Are the Recommended Treatments? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello,

I have a receding hairline (power alleys) that I’ve watched continually recede over the past few years. It appears that the majority of my hair loss is in the frontal hariline, but over the past year I’ve noticed that the hair on the top of my head has become thinner. Each year that has passed I’ve noticed a logical progression of balding. I’m 30 years old now and am looking into taking medication to not only prevent further loss, but to possibly regrow some of what has been lost on top. With my age, I feel confident in the hair loss that has occurred in my frontal hairline area. If it was possible to strengthen the frontal hairline again, then that would be icing on the cake.

I’ve flipped through the website, and from what I could find, it sounds like Finasteride and Rogaine would be the products to use in order to obtain the results I’m after. Could you verify this or offer any other treatments?

I will be getting an assessment from a dermatologist as well, but I would like to get a second opinion from this website. Unfortunately, I do not have any photos at this time. Thanks for the help

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The only FDA approved medications to treat hair loss are finasteride (Propecia) and minoxidil (Rogaine). You might read about supplements, lasers, magic lotions, etc, etc… but none of them are proven to work and in my opinion, are a waste of time. Hair loss is progressive, so the more time you spend experimenting with things that aren’t likely to work, the more time and hair is lost.

Propecia is by prescription only, and minoxidil is available at most pharmacies. Now whether these medications will work in the hairline for you remains to be seen. Generally, they work best in the crown/top of the scalp.

Hope that helps!

Dust Mites and Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Dr Rassman,

I’d like to ask a question on dust mites. I recently came down with an itchy scalp particularly in the crown area, causing me to scratch during the night. My hair began to look a little thin in that area. I’d had some stress-related hair loss problems in the past and worried it was related.

I then came to think I had head lice and so treated myself for it by combing through the hair with a lice comb almost daily. This eased the symptoms which seemed to confirm I had lice.

However the itching came back and now I think it is caused by dust rather than lice. I have a very small room with electronic equipment which attracts dust, and I had a large fan right next to my bed for the summer heat which I used during the day and overnight, which on inspection was extremely dusty.

My question is, can prolonged contact with dust cause itchy/irritated/dry scalp due to dust mites? Can this also cause hair loss? Or could it be excessive combing with a fine lice comb that could damage follices?

Thank you

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Dust mitesYou shouldn’t treat yourself without knowing what you have. You need a diagnosis before jumping to conclusions. So far you blamed lice and dust mites without knowing for sure — what’s next? At the least, you must keep a very clean environment where you live and wash your linens often. Perhaps you need to see a good doctor for a diagnosis, as a doctor will be able to find the mites or lice that you think you have.

I suppose if you were constantly scratching or pulling at your hair you could create some hair loss in those areas, though the hair loss is not directly caused by mites or lice.

Are My Bipolar Meds Causing Hair Loss? – Balding Blog

have had significant hair loss on risperidone and lithium. dr. has me on citalopram(celexa) and geodon. hair is still falling out!

what can i take for bi-polar that won’t make my hair fall out? please help!

GeodonBalancing medications for bipolar conditions can be difficult. This would take priority over the hair loss issues, but your doctor may be able to substitute one med for another if they may feel a particular medication is causing your hair loss.

Lithium, risperidone (Risperdal), citalopram (Celexa), and ziprasidone (Geodon) can all cause hair loss according to the medical literature. With that said, hair loss is mostly caused by genetics, and although medications can be a cause it is generally rare. I’m not suggesting the medications aren’t playing a role in the loss, but at the least, you should have an examination by a physician to find the cause.

In other words, you need a diagnosis before you go about thinking of a treatment plan.


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Merck’s FDA-Submitted Propecia Documents – Balding Blog

Hello Dr,
First I would like to thank you for your great blog which is extremely helpful. I am a medical school student and I was doing some research on the documentation of Merck for approval of Propecia. Some data which was submitted to FDA brought my interest toward these documents. [Link: PDF file]

As you can see in the link above there are some figures regarding the DHT in scalp as well at T serum. I can see clearly that 0.05mg of finasteride would significantly lower T and DHT levels in scalp while this dosage does not effect the hormone levels as much in the rest of the blood (although the numbers are lower for 0.05mg,but still they are very close to 1mg and look very effective). Now my question to you is that why aren’t we using 0.05mg dosage instead of 1mg? 1mg finasteride seems to lower DHT and T levels a lot more in the blood which causes uncomfortable side effects; and we also know that once we lower 1mg to 0.5 (half a pill) or 0.25mg the side effect tend to subside, so we do know that the side effects of finasteride are dosage dependent.

Also I would like to add that I am at one of the UC system medical schools and we have been running and experiment on MPH sufferers and so far (within 1.5 years of our study) we have been successful up to 88.5% to get the same results of finasteride 1mg by using 0.2mg dosage on 749 men. unfortunately I am not allowed to release more information about out experiment, but the results are very convincing and our study will continue for another 3-5 years on these patients.

Thank you

It has been known that a 1/2 dose of Propecia (finasteride 0.5mg) and even 1/10 dose (finasteride 0.1mg) showed efficacy on androgenic alopecia. I am aware of the study you’re referencing, and we’ve written in the past about how the 1/2 dose of Propecia is about 80% as effective as the full dose. So I believe your study! I do wonder why your school would be conducting a study that has already been published and established or why you would not be able to publish your results. I must not have all the story here.

I would say in the real world many patients with side effects elect to take 1/2 dose Propecia and see benefits for their hair. It is my understanding the 1mg finasteride was chosen for Propecia to give maximum benefits for a wide percentage of the general population while maintaining the lowest side effect profile balance. You said yourself, 88.5% get same results on 0.2mg finasteride. Maybe Merck wanted that number a bit higher for the general public.

I would be curious to know the reduction in side effects from 1mg to 0.2mg. If the reduction was not significant then I could understand why a drug company would choose the 1mg option. I do not know if this is what really happened, but it is my speculation and logical guess. Perhaps you should find this information or add it to your experiment/research and publish the data. Good luck!




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Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Vitamin K and Hair Transplant – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I have a question about Vitamin K. Since it helps with blood coagulation, would it be OK to take it before and during a hair transplant procedure? My platelets have always tended to run a bit low, which has made previous surgeries last a bit longer than they should. Thanks, and you are still doing a wonderful job with the blog!

I do not think taking vitamin K supplements would help with a hair transplant surgery. Blood coagulation is not as simple as adding a vitamin. Please ask your doctor to address your blood coagulation and platelet issues. Do you have von Willebrand disease (vWD)?


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Let the Buyer Beware! So, What Does That Mean? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Price cutAs one might assume, I receive quite a few emails each and every day from prospective patients both through my NHI site and this blog. It seems that everyone knows the Norwood patterns of hair loss (that’s a good thing), so these emails fundamentally focus upon identifying where the person believes his hair loss is on this chart and asking how much it would cost to get a hair transplant.

For example, Joe Doe says he is a Norwood Class 3 and asks if I can tell him how much a transplant would cost to give him back his hair. Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to have a formulae that determines the costs of a Norwood Class 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 pattern of hair loss? Like five price categories that fit all needs, or like a compact car to a full size car that you might rent from AVIS. These naive men, unfortunately, do not understand that the variables in determining costs reflect the weight/thickness of the hair shafts (finer haired men will frequently take more surgeries to accomplish the same goals as a coarse haired person), the character of the hair (the curly haired man will take less hair transplants to cover his balding area than the straight haired man), the contrast in color between the scalp and hair (the blond haired man with white skin will require less transplants than a black haired, white skinned person), the density of the donor hair, and the available supply of donor hair that meets the needs of the various classes of hair loss. Do all Class 3 patients have the same need? Of course not! Some can get their hair back in one surgery while others may take two or more procedures to achieve their goals.

Unfortunately, the hair transplant industry seems to have gone into commodity pricing and at least in the pricing process, the prospective buyers are demanding that the doctors’ bid on the cost of the surgeries, the costs of the grafts, or even the cost of each transplanted hair that the doctor will move around. Does commodity pricing really give the buyer something of value to compare what they are going to get?

Car buyingI have said here before that buying a hair transplant is not like buying a car. A BMW or a Chevy is a BMW or a Chevy in any dealership that you would go to, because the cars have consistent quality from one dealer to the next. Manufacturing is done off-site in Detroit or in Japan or Korea, so one model in any one brand is identical to the other. In hair transplantation surgery, this is not the case. A certain number of grafts for a specific balding pattern will not give you the same results between doctors, because of the art and the experience in doing these surgeries. I have seen more hair transplant failures recently coming into my office than I can remember. What problems I saw 15 years ago were often mutilations caused by poor techniques, plugs, and/or inappropriate surgeries like scalp reductions. Today things have gotten better with far fewer mutilations, because almost every doctor seems to be “pitching” the same surgery, the follicular unit transplant technique published by us.

What I see today is failure upon failure of (1) the hair transplants to grow, (2) less than ideal results, (3) transplants that reflect upon the doctor’s ability to milk the patient with too many grafts (or hairs), and (4) terrible scars from poor judgments and/or techniques. I know of many complicated problems, even one death, one stroke from a surgeon’s lack of skills, and at least one heart attack. Some of the doctors who see easy money in selling hair transplants can get away with terrible results, because it takes 8 months for the hair to grow and the payment for the service has already cleared his/her bank account by that time. Far too many doctors are getting away with poor outcomes due to the 8 month surgical lag, which is a long time for the patient who waited patiently for the hair that might never grow, to grow. Men seem to avoid confrontation with their hair surgeons so that the doctors seem to get away with ripping off their patients far too often. As the fees have been pushed lower and lower, the surgeons have had difficulty paying for quality staff and many of the poor results reflect that the fees that the surgeons collect have limited their ability to retain experienced technicians.

RassmanI write articles like this often to be responsible and responsive to the needs of the patients in this hair transplant process. You can read some of the past articles here, here, and here. I am sure that I make very few friends amongst the doctors who engage in performing and delivering 3rd class hair transplants. I preach over and over again to “let the buyer beware“… but beware of what? The answer runs the gamut from poor outcomes, complications with the hair transplant itself, stroke and heart attacks from an inability to command the hair transplant and anesthesia process, and even death.

Please, if you are doing your homework in the hair transplant process, meet patients who have had the work done and do not depend solely upon photos, which may not even reflect the work of the doctor who shows you the photos. Check with the medical boards of the state where the services are being performed or with the chamber of commerce and the courts where the skeletons may lie deep in their closets, possibly hidden in their archives. The information is on the web for those who want to avoid the traps.

I Want My Juvenile Hairline Back! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am 25 years old and, for the past several years, I have had a mature hairline (rather than a juvenile hairline). But, there is no evidence that i am going bald elsewhere. If, in another few years, I appear to not be going bald, I am wondering if repairing my juvenile hairline would be an option, to make me look like I did as a teenager?

I really don’t mind – Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan, a lot of movie stars, Asians, etc. – all have/had juvenile hairlines and it looks great on them. Would this be a possibility?

Thanks

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Ronald ReaganAs long as you know what you want and have realistic expectations, there is no problem with having a juvenile hairline. The doctor should do their best to understand that you will not have further balding (remember, your donor hair is limited) and you would be willing to accept the Bill Clinton or Ronald Reagan look.

The mature hairline is normal, but if you insist on having your juvenile hairline back it is entirely possible. After all this is a cosmetic surgery!

By the way, are you considering running for the next President?

If Propecia Only Holds Hair for X Years, Why Even Take It Before a Transplant? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

You have stated many times that Propecia usually slows down the balding process, but does not stop it completely.

Let’s say someone has started thinning in areas that Propecia typically works on. How long can the average person expect to keep that hair assuming the drug works?

If Propecia works for five years and then all of that hair falls out soon after, does it really matter if someone is on the drug before they get a transplant? The hair will just fall out anyways.

Thanks for your time.

Yes, nothing stops hair loss completely. But I would like to answer your question with another question — Wouldn’t you want to keep your existing hair as long as possible along with the transplanted hair?

Taking Propecia before a hair transplant also protects against shock loss, which is additional thinning that occurs following the surgery.

I’ve had some patients that have taken Propecia for over a decade still with great results, yet I’ve also seen patients with hair loss progressing again after just a few years on the drug. As for the average person and what they can expect, the numbers are available at the Propecia site here.


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