Hair Loss from Stress and Lack of Sleep? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

SleepIf you have lost hair due to a prolonged periode of lack of sleep and stress, can you regrow some if not all of the hair you lost if you can manage to correct your sleeping patterns. Thanks

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I’d assume you would be able to regrow some hair if you knew for sure that the loss was stress/sleep related, but it can take up to one year. If the timing of your hair loss was coincidental (meaning you had genetic hair loss, but you had a period of stress at the same time) that genetic loss won’t regrow on its own. In the meantime, get some sleep!

Susceptibility to Traction Alopecia? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

My question is: If you already have a predisposition for balding, would you be more susceptible to other balding factors as well? i.e; traction alopecia, or something else that may lead to hair loss?

Thank you

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I think you are confused about balding issues. Male pattern baldness (MPB) is genetic to that particular trait.

Traction alopecia is hair loss from pulling on your hair. It has nothing to do with MPB and many people (usually with a tight braids hairstyle) will see traction loss without any other patterned genetic balding. In other words, you are not susceptible to traction alopecia if you have male pattern baldness. So the short answer to your question is “no”.

I’ve Lost Half of My Hair in 8 Months! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello,
I was wondering if i could get some advice on my hair loss. Over the past 8 months I have lost over half of my hair. I originally thought it was from dying it, so i stopped doing that all together. I’m 21 years old, and have always had a thick head of hair. We went to the doctors and we found out that i have an underactive thyroid, not by much, but for a 21 year old he said it should be higher, so now I have officially been on the medication for over a month now. My scalp is itchy, and I’m not sure if its from regrowth or loss of hair.

What is the deal with an itchy scalp? How long does it actually take for new hair to regrow? If it does, when will I see signs of it? Are there any other things that it could be?

thanks in advance! your site is very helpful!

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If the cause of your hair loss and skin changes are from a thyroid condition, the hair loss may regrow in a year or so, but it may never recover to the point before the disease appeared. Unfortunately, all you can do is really just wait it out and keep following up with your doctors.

The skin condition needs to be looked at by a dermatologist. I couldn’t say if its due to your hair falling out (some people report that their scalp itches before losing hair, though that hasn’t been officially linked), but you wouldn’t see regrowth this quickly after starting treatment. Common causes of an itchy scalp can be found here.

My Hair Was Pulled and Now My Hair Falls Out and My Scalp Burns! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am a 30 year old female and I had an incident over a month ago when all my hair was violently yanked by my boyfriends 3 year old. I woke up the next morning and started losing hair. Since then my scalp has been burning so bad that I have thought about suicide. The hair fall out is very noticable and is all over the head. It hurts to go outside and I have also developed a white substance on my scalp, almost like a coating that I can scrape off with my nails. It’s gross and waxy. My head has a wierd, painful sensation and I literally can feel the hair detaching from my head. Sometimes I will just feel it fall and at other times I will have a sharp needle-like pain and the hair will fall out. I am so scared about what I have read on other sites.

What is this sensation/pain/burning and how do I stop the hair from falling out? Will my hair regrow or is this burning a sign that the follicles were damaged and I am doomed. I have always had a healthy, thick, beautiful head of hair that goes to the middle of my back. Now it’s falling out in handfuls. I have been to several doctors/derms and they said I’m fine or more accurately crazy for obsessing about it. No one is listening to me! Please help! Any advice? Thanks….

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Okay, let’s stop and think about what you just wrote. You are thinking of suicide! Please seek the help of a professional who can help you with this issue. Either go see your psychiatrist/therapist or a physician than can assess your hair loss issue. If no doctors are listening to you, go find another doctor that will! This is obviously a very huge issue in your life right now, so don’t give up on solving it. Without an examination, there’s really not much more help I can provide over the internet, but I wish you good luck.

I can’t explain the intense burning you now feel, but the traumatic hair loss like you describe usually grows back in about one year. What is it that you read on various sites that has you so scared?

Daughter Losing Hair After Chemical Straightening – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

My daughter had a small piece of hair staightened at the beginning of March. By Easter we noticed a small patch of balding. Thinking it was due to the straightening and possibly getting into the pool ( she is a swimmer) without washing her hair we just watched the area. It is now May and the balding has spread to the front 1/4 of her head and continues to grow. Could this still be a reaction from the chemicals? If so why has it spread so much from the orignal chemically treated spot? What should I do to prevent more hair loss? Thank you.

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It sounds strange that she is losing hair on the front 1/4 of her head. Maybe your description is off and pictures may help, but nevertheless, I would take her to see a doctor to make sure there are no other medial issues associated with her hair loss.

Chemicals can cause skin irritation and reaction, and may cause temporary hair loss. It usually takes up to one year for hairs to regrow if this is the case.

Large Skin Flakes on Scalp and Hair Loss! What is This? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Experiencing severe hair loss. Over the last year I have had drastic hair loss. I also have thin layers of skin it seems, that is almost over my entire scalp. And these are not small flakes, these are like when you sun burn and peel, they aren’t flat either, when you peel them off they are quite long and almost like small white bumps on them. Anyways I don’t know if that’s related to my hair lose, though it has to be, because I don’t see how hair can grow thru all of that. But my family, parents, grandparents, still have there hair. And it’s not like I’m using receding, I’m going completely bald all over the top of my head. I’m wondering if you could tell me what it might possiblly be.

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I really cannot give you a diagnosis. But personally, if I have white bumps and raised skin flakes that peel off on my scalp with drastic hair loss that is causing me to go completely bald, I would go see a doctor as fast as I could. Maybe you have seborrheic dermatitis, psoriasis, a fungal infection, or possibly even skin cancer. My point is I am guessing in the dark… so you really should go see a doctor for an examination.

Hair Loss from Allergic Reaction to Hair Product? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

My daughter use a mousse hair product that she used for several years and had an allergic reaction. Her forehead, neck, scalp and eyelids peeled. A few weeks later she notices her hair falling out. She went to the derm and he prescribed topical treatments. They said it would take a few weeks to see results and less hair falling out because of the severe seborrea? Anything you tell her from your experience.

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It’s possible to have an allergic reaction to hair products, but she used that particular product for years and then suddenly developed a severe allergy? If your daughter is under the care of a dermatologist already, he/she will have more experience with allergic reactions than I would. Besides, I don’t know what topical treatment/dosage was prescribed, nor do I even know what the allergy was.

Hair Loss InformationAHLA Says Seborrheic Dermatitis Causes Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr.Rassman, you’ve written much about dermatitis and hair loss. It seems that in your opinion even the worst case of sebhorrheic dermatitis (excessive plaque, high levels of sebum, chronic flaking, bleeding etc.) doesn’t contribute directly to hair loss – especially of the patterned kind. However many people out there believe the two to be linked, including many physicians. I just came across an article from a non-profit organization called the American Hair Loss Association detailing various hair fungi and scalp conditions.

In their discussion of dermatitis they claim that, and I quote, “Although all this inflammation is not specifically directed at the hair follicle, if hair follicles are in the vicinity of the inflammatory cells then they can still be adversely affected. Hair follicles find inflamed skin an unhealthy environment in which to grow. Thus seborrheic dermatitis may non-specifically cause diffuse hair loss.” Is this a reputable source and how would you respond to this claim?

*The full article can be found here: AHLA – Infectious Agents

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Flaking of the skin from seborrheic dermatitis itself does not cause hair loss, but if the scalp is picked and the flakes are pulled off, then hair loss can be a result of that process (meaning the hair will come off with the plaque). If a person picks on it regularly, that person can develop traction alopecia or even a condition called dermatillomania, a form of OCD.

I usually point out to our readers that the most common cause of hair loss (in men) is related to genetics. The differentiating factor for male pattern (genetic) hair loss from other types of hair loss is the “pattern” of the loss… but there are other causes of hair loss aside from genetics. Hair loss can be from fungus, psoriasis, anemia, immunologic, infections, stress, etc and many of these conditions may appear like a form of dermatitis. These types of hair loss can be diffuse or patchy, but there is not necessarily a cause and effect between the skin condition and the hair loss.

The American Hair Loss Association is a good, well meaning organization. I just do not agree with the opinion that they expressed connecting seborrhea to hair loss directly. I’m not sure where they got their information about that.

Receding Neckline? – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman,

I have been noticing a lot lately that most balding men also tend to lose hair on the back of the neck. The “receding neckline,” as I call it, is something that I never hear talked about on hair-loss forums, and it doesn’t appear to be represented on the Norwood scale.

Have you had any experience with patients who were concerned about this?

Yes, we occasionally see patients with neckline hair loss. It is not that common, but it does occur. In fact, a few years back a patient came to see me specifically requesting to have hair transplanted into his receding neck hairline.

The loss of neck hair is why harvesting donor hair from the correct (non-neck) area is very important for future hair loss planning. I have seen patients from other clinics who had their donor hair harvested from the neck area and I often worry that they may lose those hairs in the future if their neck hair was genetically determined to fall out, which would compromise the hair transplant.




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Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Do Varying Thickness of Hairs Fall Out During Normal Daily Cycling? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I have been experiencing hair loss and notice during daily shedding, there are visibly different diameter hairs. Do the thin hairs represent minaturized hairs destined for baldness or can this be seen with the normal telogen phase? Thanks for your reply.

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A non-balding person can lose 100 to 200 hairs a day. These hairs can be thick or thin, miniaturized or non-miniaturized. The good news is there are likely 100 to 200 new hairs growing at other areas of the scalp.

You cannot say miniaturized hairs represent hairs that are destined for baldness. It may just be a normal part of the hair cycle. In every hair follicular unit there are one or two vellus hairs which are short and thin. They go through the hair cycle like their big brothers in that follicular unit.