How Effective is Rogaine Foam?

Hey doc, been using Propecia for 2 1/2 years its slowed things down a lot, just added Rogaine Foam last week. Just wondering if I can get a straight answer on the effectiveness of Rogaine Foam. The commercial says 85% of men see regrowth, ive heard other people say it only works for 50% of men and then I saw a post from you in your archive where you say it only works well for 15% of men. Well which one is it?

Rogaine FoamWe are prisoners of our words, so I will stick to what I said.

If you are in the 15% of good responders, then it moves you into the 100% category (playing with numbers, or course). Some people feel that the Rogaine Foam works better than standard liquid Rogaine drops, because it is easier to use and thus better for those who find the drops difficult to titrate. If there are 85% of men that see some growth, I’d estimate that maybe 15% of men see it work very well.


2011-07-15 06:27:42How Effective is Rogaine Foam?

How Far Back In My Family Tree Should I Look for Balding?

You’ve said before that balding comes from both sides with a tiny bit more weight on your mother’s side. When looking through a family tree for traits and patterns of hair loss (which I’m sure every visitor to this site has done over and over), how far back or in to your extended family should you look (cousins, uncles, great uncles, etc.), or can it spring up out of anywhere? I understand there are many environmental factors as well, but I ask because I have some unique traits I can’t attribute to anyone I have photos of in the past two generations or my second cousins even.

Genetic hair loss will likely be visible somewhere in your family tree, but I really cannot give you a definitive way to predict if you have the hair loss gene just by looking at your family members. The best way to know is look in the mirror… or see a doctor for a miniaturization study and/or hair bulk analysis.

The genes can be determined by genetic testing to 70% accuracy (see HairDX), but the test doesn’t tell you at what point the genes will be expressed, if at all.


2011-02-01 13:07:46How Far Back In My Family Tree Should I Look for Balding?

How Fast Can DUPA Take Effect?

I have a question about this condition which you call DUPA. Is its onset so sudden that you could go from having an overly thick head of hair to diffuse thinning including the sides and back in only 1 month. Also can chemical overprocessing make some of the individual hair strands thinner, because if so than I experienced it. I am torn between whether this is a chemical issue or I am suffering from sudden DUPA.

DUPA (diffuse unpatterned alopecia) will not appear in a month. If and when it hits, I suspect that it will develop over a long period of time (months to years). Chemical damage, on the other hand, will have a short cycle.

We do not understand a great deal about DUPA, but we are aware that the zone of hair around the sides and back of the head may not be permanent in everyone throughout their lifetime. If you go to an old age home and look at many of the men there, about 1/3rd to a half of the men over 80 have a see-through look on the sides and back of the head. When this is evaluated by mapping out the scalp for miniaturization, one sees many thin hairs in this ‘donor rim’ that should not be there. This diffuse alopecia may extend throughout the head, even in men who have no balding. I would venture to make the diagnosis of DUPA in these men. I believe that this condition, which the dermatologists have labeled ‘senile alopecia’, is something that hits men in all decades of life and a few men develop this condition when they are in their 20s or 30s. The use of Propecia has benefits to about half of these men, so I generally put people on Propecia who show signs of DUPA. Many of the poor transplant results that are seen occurs when the patient has DUPA and the surgeon does not check for it. The transplants become thin and the donor area, which was see through prior to the procedure, gets more see through after. I strongly warn every one of those patients I see with DUPA against having hair transplants and consider this condition a contra-indication for hair transplant surgery.

This is what we wrote about the various diffuse alopecias in a medical journal: “In addition to the regular Norwood Classes (I to VII) and the Norwood Class A’s (Ia to Va), there are two other types of male baldness that O’tar Norwood has termed “Diffuse Patterned Alopecia” and “Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia.” 2 Although these patterns receive little attention, they appear to be quite common and present special problems for the transplant surgeon. We have attempted to further define and stage these two types of balding in order to gain insight into their appropriate management.

Diffuse Patterned Alopecia (DPA) is an androgenetic alopecia characterized by diffuse thinning in the front, top, and vertex of the scalp in conjunction with a stable permanent zone. Diffuse Patterned Alopecia is usually associated with the persistence of the frontal hairline represented by the hairline position of the Norwood Class II or Class III patient. Especially in the earlier stages, the thinning generally extends to the vertex without significant hair loss in the crown. It differs from the regular Norwood classification in that, when the hair loss is first noted, it is already in a stage resembling a thinning Norwood Class VI, rather than having progressed through the Norwood stages III, III Vertex, IV, and V, which are characterized by continued recession at the temples, an expanding vertex/crown, and the presence of a defined bridge separating the anterior and posterior portions of the scalp. In addition, there is an absence of the residual triangular elevation in the parietal region that helps to define the typical Norwood Class VI patient.

Diffuse Patterned Alopecia differs from the less common Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia (DUPA) which is also androgenetic, but lacks a stable permanent zone. Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia patients have a similar progression of balding as the DPA patient except that the progression is often more rapid and will more likely eventuate in a “horseshoe pattern” resembling the Norwood class VII, except that in contrast to the Norwood VII, the DUPA “horseshoe” can look almost “transparent” due to the low density. The differentiation between DPA and DUPA is critically important because DPA patients are often good candidates for an appropriately timed transplant, whereas DUPA patients should almost never be transplanted because they will inevitably have extensive hair loss without a stable zone in which to harvest the hair.

Both Diffuse Patterned and Unpatterned alopecia also occur in women. However, in contrast to men, the DUPA in women is much more common, probably occurring 10 times as frequently as DPA. As in men, the female DUPA patients are not good candidates for a transplant (except in the instance where the donor hair is used solely to soften the frontal edge of a wig). The high incidence of Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia in women partly explains why so few women have their hair transplanted. It is also important to emphasize that a non-androgenetic differential must be considered in all unpatterned alopecias. This is especially true in women, where a host of medical conditions can produce diffuse unpatterned hair loss including anemia, thyroid disease, connective tissue disease, gynecological conditions, and severe emotional problems.

We find densitometry to be helpful in distinguishing Diffuse Patterned Alopecia from Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia. A donor density in the range of 1.0 to 1.5 hairs/mm 2 with donor miniaturization in excess of 35% indicates an unstable permanent zone and precludes a diagnosis of DPA. As discussed in the section “Predicting Short- and Long-Term Hair-Loss,” these densitometry readings in a younger patient, even with little clinically apparent hair loss, point toward a high risk of extensive balding. The importance of densitometry is that not only will it help to distinguish between DPA and DUPA, but it can help to predict which patient will not be a good candidate for a transplant even before visible balding has begun. “


2007-07-11 14:45:17How Fast Can DUPA Take Effect?

How Fast Does Hair Loss Occur?

Hi Dr. Rassman,

First, thank you for making this blog available. It’s great and tremendously helpful. Here’s my situation: I am 25 years old. My 65 year dad has major baldness and my mom’s brother have had issues with balding too, so my future is not good. My hair was normal until a year ago, when I graduated from university and got a job that’s stressful. Since then, my hair has been disappearing. The crowns are rising and my thick hair has become thin… losing about 40% in volume already.

Does balding happen this fast? And is it all this stress that I’m dealing with? I thought I’d have normal hair until my 30s, but I have to deal with this now unfortunately.

Thanks

If you have genetic hair loss, you should map out the scalp and hair for miniaturization and then (assuming you are genetically balding) go on finasteride (Propecia), which will slow down and possibly even reverse the hair loss you are experiencing.

There’s no one true answer to each of your questions. Everyone loses hair at different rates and stress can certainly accelerate it. Seek out medical attention, as the earlier you start treating it, the better will be your future with the hair you still have left.

How Hair Loss Forums Revolutionized The Hair Transplant Industry

I have had hundreds of thousands of readers on baldingblog.com over the years and received significant positive feedback. I believe that when doctors, in particular, open themselves to the public, there is a great value to dispelling myths and bringing the truth forward. Too many people react to hair loss with ignorance. Reddit has also been a significant positive force for educating the public from peers and even people like me. Some great references have appeared and I have found myself educated from being a Reddit participant.


2019-10-26 13:12:49How Hair Loss Forums Revolutionized The Hair Transplant Industry

What is a good donor area for hair transplants?

How good does the donor area have to be to achieve that amount of coverage with the amount of hair loss he started with taken into account? Does the patient have to have a very dense donor area or would just an “average donor” area be enough?

An average donor area will work fine. A medium hair shaft or thicker hair shafts produce more fullness per graft than a fine hair this is important. It is not unusual for a fine haired person to have a second hair transplant to get more fullness

How Fast Does an Eyebrow Transplant Grow?

Hello Dr. In How many month I can see the final results for an eyebrow transplant?

As with hair transplant surgery on the scalp, you should see some results from an eyebrow transplant anywhere between 3 months up to 12 months after the procedure. Some grow faster, some grow slower. Everybody is different.

How good does SMP look? (photo)

I had a How good does SMP look? Also see: https://scalpmicropigmentation.com/ You can judge for yourself. Every ‘hair’ on his head is actually a tattoo.


2020-07-27 15:18:15How good does SMP look? (photo)

How Is It Possible For the Forelock to Remain but Bald All Around It?

Dear Dr. Rassman,

How is this possible? I’ve noticed this celebrity whose entire forhead is bald except for a little stubborn patch in the middle. It doesn’t make any sense. How can the entire forhead go bald while a little patch remains? Does not DHT miniturize all the hairs? Here is the picture of the celebrity below and another picture I found with a gentlemen who has the same pattern.

Celebrity – John C. McGinley

PG.com patient

I’ve been asked about this before, and I always point to David Letterman, who has a persistent forelock and hair loss around it. This is a genetic trait (shown well in your photo references) which is common in some families. I see it quite often.


2007-07-19 10:34:33How Is It Possible For the Forelock to Remain but Bald All Around It?

How important is hair, really?

I’ve been using finasteride and minox for years and it saved my hair. Ofcourse I am happy with that, but comparing it to earlier, when I was super obsessed with my hair, it seems less important today. Do you think you’ll continue treatments for a long time, even into old age, or at one point not really care anymore?

I just did 3000 grafts on a wealthy and successful businessman who actually didn’t want to do the hair transplant; however, his best friend who I transplanted last year, looked so good, he got pressured into it by this friend. Now that the surgery is over, he told me this story and also told me that the procedure was a delightful day away from his pressures at work and home. He was happy that he did it.

In my experience, with thousands of hair transplants under my belt, I found that 100% of the men who underwent the transplant, found that they felt better about themselves when they look into the mirror, regardless of marital status or independent wealth.