Daily hair loss in shower and elsewhere

I’ve heard it’s normal to lose over 100 hairs throughout the day, but every time I wash my hair and towel dry it’s seems I’m losing a ton of hair. I’ll shampoo and each time I run my hands through my soapy hair and look at them there’ll be close to or over 10 hairs and appears like it adds up to almost 100. No matter how many times I run my hands through my hair I’ll see a bunch of hairs. Then, if I towel dry with a white towel I’ll see even more hairs. Is it normal to lose this much hair just in the shower? I shower every day but wash my hair every two to three days.

The average hair loss per day for an average Caucasian male is 100,000 hairs, but I doubt that you would lose them all in the shower unless you are losing more than 100 hairs per day which would occur in a hair loss situation. When you rub hair that is miniaturizing, these hair easily come out with your fingers, your towel and almost anything you do to rough up your hair.


2019-03-26 18:23:11Daily hair loss in shower and elsewhere

Daily Hair Loss – What is Normal?

Dr.Rassman,
I heard from somebody that the average person loses 100 hairs a day. This seemed really high to me, is it true?

Yes, this is true. It is believed that the average person has about 100,000 hairs on their head and the life cycle for a hair (before going into its cycle shut down and regrowth) is 3 years. Wtih that said, that means 35,000 hairs lost per year or about 100 (rounded) hairs per day for 3 years will equal the total number of hairs on the head of an average Caucasian Male.

My Dad Has Hypothyroidism and Developed Hair Loss as I Am Now Doing.

I am taking good care of myself with a 1000 calorie diet and daily exercise, but I am losing hair anyways. Can I have a thyroid problem?

Both hypo and hyperthyroidism can cause hair loss and precipitate genetic balding if you have the genes for balding. You need to see a doctor and get your thyroid checked out. Also, your extreme diet can cause balding to appear especially if you have the genes for balding.


2018-11-01 06:37:03My Dad Has Hypothyroidism and Developed Hair Loss as I Am Now Doing.

Daily Hair Loss

Hi Doctor Rassman, how much daily hair loss is normal? some say 50-100, others say 100-150-200 is normal. From your expertise what is normal for an average male with no hairloss.

I believe we wrote about this subject many times over. The average person can loses 0.1% of their total hair count per day as these hairs go into telogen. You must also remember that the person is growing back about the same number of hairs each day. Assuming that the average telogen cycle recurs every 3 years and you have 100,000 total hair count, that calculates to about 100 hairs/day. The numbers are clearly not fixed by nature, so it may vary based upon individual circumstances, genetic patterns, your age and sex.

Daily Low Dose Aspirin Reduces Cancer Risks

“Regular, long-term use of low-dose aspirin is linked to a small decrease in overall cancer risk, with much of the reduction due to decreased gastrointestinal (GI) cancers, particularly colorectal cancer (CRC), new research involving more than 135,000 adults indicates.” This was reported in the March 3 issue in JAMA Oncology.

This is so simple, and has benefits to reduce the risks of stroke and heart attacks as well. Just take one baby aspirin each day

Day 65, is this a live graft I lost?

This is not a problem at day 65 as this graft is a dead remnant of the transplanted graft. You will be shedding many of these starting two weeks after the surgery, and shedding remnants of the grafts is normal until all of the new hair grows in. The hair graft is held in the upper left corner.

Dandruff and Hair Loss in 16 Year Old

My son is 16yrs old. I noticed when cutting his hair he had a thick piece of what seemed like caked dandruff it was there for the longest time. Then one day when cutting his hair the thick piece of dandruff was gone and ther was a bald spot. As I looked at his head I noticed there was a thin straight line of baldness then off to the right was another little spot. I took him to the dr. who did a blood test for his throid and that came back good. His spot is getting bigger and it doesn’t look like any hair is growing back from where I orig. saw the spot. There is not balding in either of the families. I checked his head tonight it looks like there is flakey dandruff all over his scalp and even some broken skin like he had been scratching. I have made an appointment with a dermotoligst but what should I expect. Do you have any idea what this is?

What you are describing may be a localized area of psoriasis or seborrheic dermatitis which crusted and then with the crust ‘ripped’ off, the hair came out with it. The loss of local hair from an acute traction episode, could be responsible for what you are observing, and if this is the case, the hair will return if your son leaves it alone. What appears like dandruff may turn out to be seborrheic dermatitis, eczema, psoriasis, alopecia areata, or some other dermatological inflammatory disease of the skin. Your planned visit to a dermatologist for further evaluation is a good next step.

On a separate, interesting note, doctors have recently pinpointed the Psoriasis gene: Forbes.com


2006-03-23 12:49:24Dandruff and Hair Loss in 16 Year Old

My Daughter Is 6, and Her Hair Doesn’t Grow. Our Doctor Suggested the Diagnosis Is Short Anagen Syndrome.

This is an unusual genetic condition. Topical Minoxidil may help, but reports are not well documented. When she gets older, try oral Minoxidil as it may have value. I don’t like using this drug in someone of your daughter’s age. For the readers’ education, the short anagen syndrome means that hair, which usually grows out about 3 years in a child at a rate of about 1/2 inch per month, has a short growing cycle that does not allow the hair to grow out long. If the rate of growth is a 1/2 inch per month, and the anagen cycle lasts two months, for example, the length of hair will be limited to one inch or so.


2018-06-19 09:05:01My Daughter Is 6, and Her Hair Doesn’t Grow. Our Doctor Suggested the Diagnosis Is Short Anagen Syndrome.

Deceptive Marketing, Questionable Ethics, and the Hair Transplant Network Lawsuit

I read that [name removed] is suing the hair transplant network since they expressed their reservations about him and his questionable ethics, deceptive marketing practices, as well as issues with his hair transplant technique both FUT and FUE. I also believe that you are the person who invented the FUE technique. Is that right? Do let me know since I would want to know if this doctor is as good as everybody says he really is.

Regards

[Editor’s note: The above question has been changed to omit the names of the doctors and to avoid adding fuel to the fire]

You ask a loaded question, but I will keep this as simple as possible, even though it will get quite lengthy.

FUE and the doctors that use this method:

Yes, I introduced the follicular unit extraction technique (FUE) back in 2002 at the International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS) conference in Chicago and published the classic article on the subject in the Journal of Dermatologic Surgery that same year. FUE as a new procedure had many people interested, but when the doctors actually began to use the technique, they quickly realized that it was tedious, difficult, and required a real change in the way the surgery would be delivered, so in the long term it was not welcomed by most of the surgeons. Even today with the attention to detail required to minimize damage from the technique, it is not routinely offered by many doctors. However, with increasing demand by the consumer, more and more doctors seem to claim “expertise” (even if they can’t do it well) since there is a lot of money to be made in offering this service. Putting 2000 holes into a person’s scalp does not mean that 2000 viable grafts will be produced that will eventually grow into a nice head of hair. So some doctors offer a service and simply can’t deliver the goods. Being a “minimally invasive” surgery, FUE is certainly a great procedure and it sells well so marketing it is not difficult. It is virtually painless in the post operative period and it leaves virtually no detectable scarring (small punctate scars) unless the head is shaved, but most patients do not realize that there are also limitations and problems with the FUE procedure itself, such as how you will not know if it worked for a good 8 months after it is performed and if the surgeon could not perform the procedure as promised, the check will have cleared his bank account. Unfortunately, there are deceptive marketing practices everywhere you look and as I always say, let the buyer beware.

At the recent ISHRS physician meeting in Montreal last week, many doctors were claiming to do FUE in numbers that boggle my mind. I would say that some of the claims I heard by some of the doctors were unbelievable, and as that is my personal opinion (as the inventor of the procedure), it is an opinion that needs to be shared with you. In the next week or so right here on BaldingBlog and on the NHI site, I will publish an extensive discussion on FUE, which I’m presently writing with the goal of educating consumers about spending thousands of dollars on a procedure that could fail. I want to provide tools that might help them avoid getting trapped into deceptive practices that may be relatively commonplace. Stay tuned for more on that.

Legalities and understanding how these Internet marketing sites work:

With regard to the litigation, the sponsoring agency central to the lawsuit is the Hair Transplant Network (HTN) and they have been fairly open about the problems as they see it. Although it is no secret, I must point out that HTN levies fees to doctor members for their participation in advertising and promotional activities. They maintain the position that they have a responsibility to judge the value of the doctors’ services and the doctor’s ethics. They restrict their membership only to doctors they feel are worthy, ethical, competent as well as those doctors who are willing to pay them their monthly participation fee for their services. You can imagine that such a set of activities can not only rub some of the doctors in the field the wrong way, but could be frankly damaging to the doctor’s worldwide reputation. The damage comes from either comments that might be made that denigrate the doctor’s skills by directly discussing his/her practice, services, or ethics, or by excluding specific doctors who are not paying the monthly marketing fee when the site’s contributors discuss the best doctors in the field. It is like saying, “to be a great doctor, you have to be willing to pay the monthly fee”. An omission of a doctor from the “best doctor list” itself can be perceived as a statement reflecting the unworthiness of a doctor to potential buyers who are shopping for hair transplant services. HTN is a privately held business and will do what its owners believe are in the best interest of HTN, their audience and readership, the consumer, or their participating doctors. The doctors involved in this particular litigation also have their own self-interest and self-preservation focus. What claims are made about a doctor’s ethics or skills may or may not be true, so how this particular litigation unfolds will tell us much about the facts as the legal process goes forward. For those interested in reading more from the HTN’s side of things, follow the thread on their forum and draw your own conclusions on truth and justice.

Conflict of interest:

There are three words that trouble me with regard to all of the “consumer advocacy” sites and web forums — “conflict of interest“. As stated above, doctors have to pay HTN and other such sites to be included among the list of recommended doctors. Promoting member doctors can be costly and the crux of any business is to have income that exceeds expenses (therefore producing profits), and I am fully in favor of the capitalistic business model. There is no doubt that I am very much into free enterprise, provided that fairness, honesty, and truth remain central to the business process where conflicting interests and the profit motive do not outweigh the integrity of the process.

So there’s my 2-3 cents, and I hope it gives everyone something to think about.


2008-09-13 10:09:59Deceptive Marketing, Questionable Ethics, and the Hair Transplant Network Lawsuit