Frequent X-Rays and Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

(female) I had about 30 x rays this year… A few months later a started to lose a lot of hair, evenly and patches. I am very young and have a bald spots on my head. My doctor said he doesn’t believe that x rays would be cause of hair loss. Blood test didn’t show any reasons for hair loss also. And it’s not a genetic thing for sure. Anybody, please…..
Thanks

I would agree with your doctor that clinical X-rays should not cause hair loss. Taking one thing out of your past year’s history (like frequent X-rays), does not paint a full picture of your heath issue with regard to your hair. In other words, I couldn’t begin to guess at the cause for your loss, but I don’t believe X-rays are the reason.

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Thinning All Over Scalp When Going from Adolescent to Adult? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Doc,
I went to have a miniaturization study done, and the doctor noticed that I have miniaturization everywhere, even in the permanent hair zone of the scalp. He says that I am going through a thinning process as I go from an adolescent to an adult. How long can I expect this to go on?

If you are developing fine hair where it did not exist before as you go from an adolescent hair to an adult hair, then that is possibly your new norm. What did your doctor say about the cause, besides describing it to you?

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Is Hair Loss from Stress Going to Be Diffuse? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Mr. Rassman! Many off us now that chronic stress is bad for the overall health, one of the potential effects of stressors is an increased hairloss, maybe not such a big problem if you dont have androgenetic alopecia but if you do this temporary increased hairloss can potentially do more damage to the already weakening follicles! So my questions is:

1. In the connection to stress what is exactly happening chemically in the hair follicles that is leading to increased hairloss/premature entering of the anagen follicles to telogen?

2. And finally, hairloss that is connected to severe stress follows a diffuse pattern or am i wrong?

I do not have the answer to your question. Extreme stress (both emotional or physical) can cause hair loss and for men with genetic hair loss, it will follow a pattern of loss (not become diffuse). In women, this is often not the case as they are more likely to develop a diffuse form of thinning (without a specific pattern). I do not know the exact biochemical science behind hair loss caused by stress. As it is often said, medicine is mostly a descriptive science. Many times, we don’t know exact mechanisms.

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Laser Removal of Body Hair While Taking Propecia? – Balding Blog

I started taking propecia about a month ago. Im starting to see gains and am very happy with the results thus far. Prior to starting propecia, i had gone for a few lasic hair removal sessions for my back and arms. I have a few more sessions for lasic, but i wanted to make sure that the two processes (for hair loss and hair gain) won’t fight and i can continue with both. Thanks for the great blog. it really helped me decided that Propecia was the right choice for me!

There is no problem with performing laser hair removal at the same time while you are taking Propecia. What the laser does is burns the hair follicle and kills it, but it is not 100% as hairs that are in the telogen phase will not be impacted and the general success rate for the ‘kill’ is usually 50% per treatment. Good luck!




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My Doctor Gave Me Steroids to Grow My Mustache – Balding Blog

i am 21 and losing my hair on one side of my mustache. i went to a doctor and he geve me something that had steriods in it and told me it should start growing back in 3 to 6 months. well it has been a year and nothing. i haven’t lost anymore but it still hasn’t grown back. i am missing the left side of my mustache. why and what can i do to get it growing again?

I do not know why you’d be treated with steroids (topical, I am assuming) to help grow a mustache. It is very peculiar that half of a mustache would be missing. I am having a hard time imagining someone with half a mustache, but high on the list of diagnosis would be alopecia areata. I also do not know of a successful treatment to grow a mustache other than hair transplant surgery. It really works, but if you have alopecia areata present, the disease will kill off any hair in the mustache area.

Before you even consider a hair transplant surgery, you need to see a good dermatologist and get a working diagnosis of why you’re missing have half of your mustache.


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Propecia Only Delays the Inevitable? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

You always say that even if you use Propecia your genetic fate will eventually catch up. Do you mean that, Propecia only delays your patterns? Like for example you gotta be a NW3 at 25, Propecia can help you that you won’t become a NW3 till like 30 or so? Please give me an explanation for this.

Yes, if you are going to go bald (Norwood Class 7 pattern, for example), you will go bald sooner or later. Propecia can help make it later rather than sooner, so at the least the medication can slow it down. At best it may stop it, and in the young man, many reverse it.

We are all going to die, but we do what we can to keep ourselves healthy — take high blood pressure pills if we have high blood pressure, diet or take cholesterol lower medications for high cholesterol, etc.

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Why Didn’t My Surgeon Just Make My Hair Dense in 1 Surgery — Now I Need Another Procedure? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I had a hair transplant 15 months ago using the strip method procedure. I only had the temple areas done for my receding hairline. I am happy with the procedure, however i would of liked slightly more density. I told this to my surgeon who said he could preform another transplant but i was confused to why he couldn’t of transplanted such two small areas in one session. My worry is that my scar although really well concealed and unnoticeable it is very long. Im worried i dont have enough donor hair now incase i developed into a norwood 7 (completely bald). I know unless you seen me face to face and analyzed my head you couldn’t tell however here is my question. If my transplant surgeon has used alot of donor supply another strip procedure would obviously not be a good idea.

Here is my thinking and i might be wrong so please explain if i am. If i have already had a strip procedure and i wanted another transplant i think FUE would be a better second procedure as you have ability to choose hairs from different areas from the donor area thus being able to use more hairs than you could from a strip procedure. The reason for this is that a strip procedure can only can only be extracted in one long strip which is wasting useable hairs, however with FUE i feel that if someone has had a strip procedure which has used a large amount of surface area obviously another strip procedure would be difficult as theres not enough space for another slit and but with FUE you could extract hairs from all over the donor area. Am i thinking correctly. The doctor told me he transplanted 1464 hairs. is that too much for a receding hair which goes back 2 inches, which means he mustn’t of transplanted that many? Please reply. Thank you NHI team.

I really don’t have a clue as to the size of your recipient area for those 1464 hairs. Assuming that it was 1464 hairs (not grafts), that means that the strip taken should not have been very large (in surface area, that is). The normal person has 1250 hairs (or 625 two-hair grafts) per square inch. At a transplant, you can calculate just what you received by figuring out the square area of the recipient area. Let’s say, for example, that you had 4 square inches of hair transplants in an area that was originally bald. That means that if you had normal hair without balding, the area we are talking about would have had 5000 hairs (or 2500 grafts) in it. If your surgeon put in 183 grafts per square inch, that reflects about 29% of the original density into that recipient area for an average Caucasian density. That is a reasonable number of grafts from a density point of view, but fullness reflects many other factors, including thickness of the hair shafts (coarser produces much more bulk than fine hair), color contrast between hair and skin color (the lower the contrast the better), the degree of wave or natural curl (straight hair is not as good as wavy hair), and the hair styling you use (short requires more density, but long does not unless the hair is fine).

The average donor supply for a typical male is about 20,000 hairs (or 10,000 grafts) and this is dependent upon the laxity (looseness) of the scalp. Based upon the number of grafts you receive as discussed above, you should have a great deal of donor hair left. The scar should be managed by your doctor and removed with the next surgery and a trichophytic closure should be done to manage the scar. Be sure that your laxity is good and do the exercises before the next surgery (see video). There is much controversy to the issue of just how dense one has to make it. I generally shoot for 25% or the original density, but in the very front of the hairline I might go a bit higher (35-40%) if the hair is fine. Transplanting hair into a bald area has mechanical limits that may reflect growth, graft damage and other factors unique to the surgical team and your unique circumstances.

FUE as a unique procedure is not very efficient in most surgeon’s hands. I believe that you are incorrect about FUE vs strip surgery. The strip method may be more efficient in the long term. Once you had a strip, it may be better to remain with it. With regard to your scar, some people just form wider scars than others. The use of special closures like trichophytic will automatically force hair to grow through a wound, but it does not sound like that is the type of closure the doctor used on you.

Progressive balding is something that occurs in every person with genetic hair loss, but fortunately only about 7% of the male population will end up with the Norwood Class 7 pattern. All good surgeons should have a Master Plan for your worse case scenario for balding, so if you should be unfortunate in developing a Class 7 pattern (even with good drug therapy) you should still have a normal appearance. I have been doing this for 18 years, and I admit that did not have the same type of common sense in my first year in practice as I do have now. There is no real substitute for that type of experience, particularly in determining the rate and degree of balding progression.

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Hair Loss InformationInfant with Ringworm = 12 Year Old With Bald Spot – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

My 12 y/o son had a ringworm in his head when he was an infant. The doctors prescribed medicine to be taken orally, and the ringworm went away, however his hair will not grow in that spot anymore. Is there anything you can recommend to promote hair growth in this area? This is affecting his self-esteem.

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Ringworm is usually successfully treated with medication and does not generally cause hair loss. Maybe there is some deep scarring that had caused hair loss around the area of infection, as I have seen some cases where this has happened in childhood and then the patient comes to see me as a young adult with that history.

My best advice is to see a physician or a surgeon who specializes in hair transplants. Hair transplantation may be an answer, but your son definitely needs a good diagnosis first. A 12 year spread indicates that the hair will not return, but I would generally not treat it with transplants at that age unless it bothers him, though that may occur further into his teens.

Hair Loss InformationHair Loss and Body Heat – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Body HeatI am wondering if the areas on the head which lose hair first in Male Pattern Hair Loss are the areas of the head which naturally release the most body heat (e.g. the temples/crown). Is there more blood flow near the skin surface in these areas?

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Great thought, but no. Your hair loss pattern is genetic and it really has nothing to do with blood flow. If you lost hair and became bald (let’s say in the crown) then any hair loss will probably occur in the hairy area where the blood supply is more robust.