Testicles and Balding – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I recently heard of a story(second hand) where a pair of identical twins, due to an unfortunate accident, were part of an interesting experiment.

Apparently at the age of 21 one of the pair lost his testis in some motor vehicle accident. Now both are in their fifties, the one who was in this accident has a full head of hair, and his identical twin is quite bald. Does this mean that removing your testis stops balding?

I am terribly sorry if this a very silly question.

Thanks for your time

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Good question! I have not heard of that story, but that is a very real possibility. Male pattern hair loss is in part due to a hormone called dihydrotestosterone (DHT). DHT is a breakdown product of testosterone. If a man is missing his testicles, which is the source of the majority of testosterone in his body, he will have a very low level of DHT and should not bald.

Hair Loss InformationCutting One Follicle to Make Two – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

When a hair is extracted with FUE, why doesn’t it grow back? I mean, couldn’t you just extract the greater part of the follicle, and leave a small portion still in the dermis, and it could generate two hair, like follicular multiplication?

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When performing the FUE procedure, you may potentially transect the follicle, thereby damaging it and causing the hair to not grow. The other possibility is that if the follicle is left behind without damage, then it might regrow. What you are postulating has been a study that was done by many people and published in medical journals (an interesting article that addresses this is: “Cloned” Hairlines: The Use of Bisected Hair Follicles to Create Finer Hairlines).

Basically, one hair will not make more than one hair. When a hair is cut in two, one part dies and the other part may grow, but if it does it is often thinner than it was before the damage was done.

Hair Loss InformationMy Doctor Was Vague About Using Minoxidil and Propecia Together – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello Dr. Rassman,

My question concerns the reintroduction of minoxidil into hair loss management. I have been assessed as a norwood 3/3a by my hair restoration doctor in NYC — I’m 24, I noticed thinning at 19, and began using minoxidil 5% immediately. I used it for 4 years, maintaining most of my hairline, although losing some density, and about a year ago started taking Propecia. Unfortunately, around the time I started using Propecia, I lost some resolve, and stopped using the minoxidil. I noticed a dramatic change in my hair, with rapid receding near the temples. The Propecia seemed to be thicking the vertex, but not doing much for the hairline. 6 weeks ago, I had a 1900 graft procedure done (1300 to the frontal area, 600 between frontal and vertex area) and now I’m wondering if I should reintroduce the minoxidil along with Propecia? I’ve been using Propecia alone for 1 year, and my hairloss seems to have stabilized (i see very little hair on the pillow or in the shower). Is it worth it? What are the up/down sides? My doctor gave me a very vague response — something along the lines of “Sure, why not, it’s up to you.” I’m curious what your thoughts are on this situation?

Thanks!

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Relationship between you and your doctor should be a partnership and if you feel there is “vagueness” in his answer or you do not understand something you should approach him and ask your questions. When dealing with your doctor, be direct about not only the question of substance you are asking, but it you feel that he/she is evasive, say that and do not beat around the bush. Please remember you are the client and he/she is your hired agent and you can expect to hold your doctor to standards of communication so tell him/her that.

BaldingBlog is not meant to be a substitute for medical advice or second opinions. That being said, if topical minoxidil has worked for you in the past and you desire to start using it again I think it is your choice. I do not think it will negatively affect your hair transplants as long as it is after one week post surgery. It is my personal opinion that you should continue using Propecia. Minoxidil is not a substitute for Propecia, but it can be a good adjunct to it.

Hair Grew Back Wavy After I Stopped Shaving My Head – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hey Dr. Rassman..My question might be a little stupid but I’m hoping you could help me out.. I’ve been on propecia for about 2 1/2 yrs now (I’m 26 yrs old).. During most of that time I shaved my head.. I grew my hair out recently and it came back very wavy. Since then I’ve noticed a large amount of hair shedding.. However the shedding is limited to only when I shower. Between washing my hair (40-50), towel drying it (10-12), and combing it (15), I see almost 80 hairs a day.. After that I put in alot of hair spray and gel and dont see a single hair fall out. Not on my pillow, not on my desk.. nothing.. Is the large number of hairs I’m seeing in the shower ones that just couldn’t come out randomly during the day? My hair is still fairly thick so I wasnt sure if they get caught in my wavy hair..

thanks for the help..

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It is normal to lose about 100 to 200 hairs a day. You may also benefit from following up with a doctor who can map your scalp hair for miniaturization to keep a quantitative record of your hair loss pattern as you continue your Propecia. With your hair short for many years, the hair loss you are now experiencing may have been happening with the short hairs such that you never noticed the fallout. The rougher you are with your longer hair, the more hair you may experience. Be gentle with the hair washing as hair that is miniaturized (impacted by genetic balding) is more far more fragile than thinning hair.

With regard to the change in hair character from straight to wavy, it is not unusual for hair character to change as we get older or as genetic balding starts to kick in. Stay on the Propecia.

I Considered a Hair Transplant, But I Can’t Take Propecia – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Doc,

Thanks for such a wonderful site, it’s been very useful.

I’m 25 with thinning hair. I have taken propecia for couple of months but I have stopped it because of side effects. I have considered hair transplant but from what I read on your blog, you mentioned that it’ll be really bad to do hair transplant without taking propecia at the same time. So what are my options if I can’t take the drug, should I even consider transplant.

Thanks a lot.

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I don’t think I’ve ever stated that it was bad to have a hair transplant if you are not taking Propecia. If you can find a BaldingBlog entry where I did please let me know.

I often advise patients to take Propecia to prevent possible shock hair loss. However this is after a personal face-to-face consult on an individual basis and after I make an assessment of what the possible long term balding pattern might be. Everybody is different and there are many patients that have hair transplants without taking Propecia, but there is some risk of acceleration of the hair loss without it. The degree of miniaturization will be proportional to the risk of shock loss. There are some 25 year olds who do not have a great deal of miniaturization and they will be a lower risk for shock loss than a person with extensive miniaturization. Maybe a short term use of Propecia to protect yourself from shock loss would be worth trying. If you are considering a hair transplant you should see a good hair transplant doctor to have all your questions answered in person. Remember, there are some absolutes and if you have a hair loss pattern indicating extensive balding is probable, then you must be able to walk that line with your doctor so that you can keep you hair and understand the risks as well.

Xanax and Female Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

(female) The last few months my hair has been thinning and my head tingles and I feel extremely stressed out… The upside of this is that I feel stubble and regrowth. My thining is all over the head but mostly in the front (bangs) I feel like it is ruining my life.. I dont feel like going out or working or doing anything! It sucks.. I used to love my hair.. I take xanax for my stress is that making it worse?? Or could it?? I got on it after my hair started falling out.. Since I feel stubble and regowth does it mean its growing back??? Thank you for your time! Have a great day!

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While many drugs are known to have a side effect of hair loss, it is relatively rare. You should always pursue if there is a treatable medical condition for hair loss. Hair loss in women have many, many causes and if it is not genetic, there is often an identifyable cause. You need to see a doctor for this who can give you a diagnostic work-up.

Burning Sensation on Hairline – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

My scalp on the left side of the hair line has had a feeling of burning off and on for the past 6 months and in the area the hair line is thinning and receding. I am 19 male and was just wondering if it is normal to feel pain if you are going bald geneticly.

Male pattern hair loss is not physically painful. The burning sensation may be secondary to an inflammatory process or an underlying medical condition. You should see a medical doctor for a correct diagnosis.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

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Hair Loss InformationI Want to End This 15 Year Nightmare – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello Dr. Rassman. I received my first hair transplant when I was 22. I received several procedures which gave me a horse shoe shape of plugs in my hair line. At that time my social life shut down completely and I wore a hat until 1996. At the time I located a new doctor and he doctor recommended removing only the plugs at the outer edge of the hairline and focusing on hiding the plugs with follicular grafts after three procedures I was able to take my hat off again although the plugs were somewhat hidden the hair line was very hard like a wall. I was never able to accept how unnatural it felt and behaved when groomed. The density behind the hair line would never match the horse shoe in my hair line. I have had two procedures to thin out the plugs and with each procedure it looks and feels better, but the camouflage came with a tradeoff. I now have a large donor scar ear to ear 5/8 wide I had two procedures to remove the scar. It did not work and the scar soon returned. I am currently having FUE extraction procedures to camouflage the scar and thin out the hair line. I believe this combination of procedures can get me the result I am looking for. I refuse to have any more linear procedures due to my healing qualities and the fact I find them way to invasive. Enter new problem — it has been harder to talk to my doctor. I believe he is tired of me and I have trouble communicating with him since I believe it will take three more procedures to get a natural result. Enter problem two — my last procedure was extremely painful. Each injection of local anesthesia was unbearable and very traumatic. I believe I am so close to having a hair line that looks and feels natural and a scar that is difficult to detect so I can finally go out and have a social life again before I reach forty. My goal is to end this 15 year nightmare before I reach 37. I just turned 35. I am still single.

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The old plugs can be a real nightmare and I really feel for your pain. It sounds like your current doctor has kept up with the correct treatments and has brought you a long way. Life is full of trade-offs and it appears that the downside of your present nightmare is the pain associated with each anesthesia and the scar from the strip surgeries, so I will address these first.

Anesthesia: There are ways to handle the pain associated with the anesthesia. For the audience who is reading this, I will explain that when a great deal of scar is present, the anesthesia gets to be very difficult and the more scar, the more difficult will be the anesthesia. But with that said, there are ways to reduce the pain you are having by using such systemic medications as Versed and Ketamine in combination, which will wipe out any pain that you might experience with further surgeries. If you doctor is not comfortable with this approach, you might have him/her bring in an anesthesiologist to monitor you through the initial injections to set up the anesthesia. I have offered this option to a few of my patients.

Scars: Scars come with all types of surgery (100% of the time) and when you have many surgeries, there is a scar of sort associated with each, even if they are in the exact same place. I tend to separate the scar issues of the donor area (which can be covered with long hair) with the other important priorities, your appearance to the public who can often not see what lies below. The goal is, of course, a normal looking hairline and a decent head of hair without obvious plugging or abnormalities. Then when the normalcy is reached from a social point of view, I tackle the scars as my primary and last set of activities using FUE if it is needed to finalize the best end point that is socially undetectable. There are many good tools that are available to treat the scars that were created by the varying older techniques and FUE is one of the newer ones. For some people with very extensive scars, balloon expanders are a reasonable option, but these often require wearing a hat to hide the balloon expanders for the 10-14 weeks it takes to stretch the normal hairy scalp so that the scars can be removed. The good things about balloon expanders is that they often will yield a good deal of additional transplants which can nicely refine the last of the corrective work.

“Socially undetectable” means that the work is repaired so that in normal situations any person will look reasonably normal. This may require a styling adjunct with the the reconstructive work. Apparently, this is what your doctor has successfully addressed and from the little you wrote here, you did admit that “I believe I am so close to having a hair line that looks and feels natural and a scar that is difficult to detect so I can finally go out and have a social life again before I reach forty.”

Repairs: This is a nightmare which I have shared with too many patients over the years. From the articles we wrote, we have developed a sizable repair practice as doctors and patients from around the world have found us as a resource. We are a team made up of good caring doctors and focused patients who we educate on the realities of their situations. The rewards, from my point of view, have been very worthwhile. Sometimes you have to look back and see from ‘whence you came’. A good doctor goes through much anguish because he/she wants the process to end as fast and as soon as the patient does, but the doctor must be realistic and keep an objective hat on his head at all times, even when the patient gets antsy and frustrated. Those times are the tests that doctors and patients have to struggle through. I suggest that patients like you should try to understand that progress is slow at times. The tortoise beat the hare in the race, because the tortoise was steady, making consistent progress towards the goal. Some of the horribly deformed patients I have seen over the years have become normal people, leaving their freaky look as a nightmare past. With the techniques which we have developed today, almost every patient can be helped, provided that they have suitable donor hair to relocate.

Reality: When I say almost every patient can be helped, what I really mean is that I will give an honest opinion as to what can be done and if the patient will hear what I’ve said, I can usually come close to the target that I outlined in the initial consultation. I always put my opinions into an extensively written report outlining the goals that I think are reasonable and which are not. Most of the patients with the old style plugs suffer greatly because of the deformities created by these old techniques. Many feel that they have been abused, taken advantage of, and become victims. They often have lost trust in all doctors. Anger is part of the problem that stands in the way of getting the best out of a good doctor/patient relationship. The key for the doctor embarking on such a project is to try to establish trust and confidence, a sense of teamwork, and a genuine feeling of caring. I have helped people who I could not bring back to a normal looking full head of hair, but I have made a point to communicate with them (in advance) the reality of what we can accomplish. The greatest problem I have seen is that some patients have run out of donor hair, so that even using the old plugs as a source of donor hair by harvesting with FUE techniques, there may still not be enough hair to get it all fixed.

See Dean’s Story for a complete repair process from plugs to a normal looking head of hair.

5 Year Old Daughter Has a Scalp Scar – Too Young for Transplant? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

My five-year-old recently had something fall on her head, and it cut her and left a scar. It is on the front of her head, so it is fairly nodicible. I could part her hair differently, but I know this will probably bother her when she gets a little older. I was wondering if there is anything you can do to help. Is there any was of restoring hair where the scar is? Is my daughter to young for a small hair restoration procedure? Please help, I know I should have been watching her closer to prevent it.

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Hair transplants are great at covering up scalp scars from accidents. It would be a fairly easy procedure depending on the size and the location of the scar. However, at 5 years old, your daughter may not tolerate the discomfort of the anesthesia and comply with the healing process. As it is a cosmetic procedure, it is my opinion that she should wait until she has a better appreciation of what is involved in such a procedure and drives the process herself.

Will I See a Difference Between Avodart and Propecia? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’m 24 and for the past year I’ve noticed some light thinning near the front of my scalp. I wanted to start taking Propecia or Avodart to prevent further hair loss and hopefully regrow some hair. I’ve read Avodart is more effective than Propecia. Do you think someone my age with moderate hair loss will notice much of difference between the two?

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I realize there are many sources of information on the internet about both Avodart and Propecia. I generally do not recommend Avodart in my regular practice (although I have prescribed it on an individual basis) because of its very long half life (the time it takes for half of the drug to be out of your blood stream — which is in the order of many days). Propecia on the other hand has a half life of a few hours. Propecia (finasteride 1mg) is the only FDA approved medication for the treatment of male pattern hair loss. I would not therefore recommend Avodart over Propecia until you go through a trial on Propecia for a minimum of 12 months. The rest is up to you and your doctor.

Remember, before starting any medication you should first consult with a medical doctor to quantitatively record your current miniaturization hair loss pattern with a hair densitometer so you can follow-up up in 6 to 8 months to see the effects of the medication.