Density in Different Parts of the Scalp In Non-Balding Men? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman
First of all I just wanted to say what a great blog you guys have!

I’m a 29 year old male with a thick head of hair and have been to the dermatologist recently and he said I have no signs of male pattern baldness but maybe going into a mature hair. I did the wrinkle brow test, but honestly my hairline even in old pictures when I was little was never really near my highest crease. How can you measure a mature hairline other than wrinkle brow? Because like I said my hairline never was like that even when I was seven years old.

I also notice that on top of my head I get hairs that are short and look thinner if I pull them out and the rest of my hairs are thick and coarse but all over my hairs seem to have different degrees and the dermatologist told me this was totally normal but I just wanted to ask you if it is? The lady that cuts my hair since I was twelve thought I was crazy when I ask her this, because she told me that she also has hairs that are thinner and thicker all over the hair and everyone does do to different hair cycles and its nothing to worry about. I do have a little OCD so I might be obsessing about something that’s totally normal.

I know the hair bulk test that you guys do is good and I told this to the lady that cuts my hair and she said if I really wanted to buy the Haircheck device that she would do it for me if I was worried and to ease my mind. I saw the video of the guy getting it done on my computer from the HairCheck website. In the video I notice they measured his hair in the middle and wanted to know if you can measure it at the hairline instead? Would the density in the front of the hairline be a little different than the back (donor area) even for a person with no signs of balding (MPB)? Do you always have to measure in the center or can you measure the left and right side head? Is measuring in the center the only way to do this bulk measurement test more accurately? Is there also a normal amount for a non balding person that the hair in front can be a little different than the hair in the back (donor hair) like percentage wise which would be consider normal?

Thanks for your time and hope to hear back from you soon! Sorry so long also You can publish this if you like too.

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Movement of the hairline to the mature position is common by your age. Measuring the mature hairline using the wrinkled brow is really more of a loose “rule”. I’ve written about that here.

Hair cycling is normal as your follicles go through different phases of growth (anagen, catagen, and telogen), so yes, your dermatologist was correct that it is normal to have some hairs with different degrees of thickness depending on where it is in the growth process. If you want to know if you are balding just behind the frontal hairline, the HairCheck is good to give a number to compare one part of the scalp to the next. You can measure at the hairline, but you should make measurements in multiple parts of the scalp.

Hair Loss InformationNot Hair Loss News – Truck Drivers at Risk for Aggressive Prostate Cancer – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Snippet from the article:

Long-haul truck drivers already face an increased risk for left-side skin cancer because of the increased exposure to ultraviolet rays through their driver’s side window. But according to new research, the risks don’t stop there. Now, scientists say truck drivers have a greater chance of developing aggressive prostate cancer, and the latest theories point toward prolonged vibration as a possible suspect.

Presented at the American Association for Cancer Research, the findings also linked aggressive prostate cancer risks with men who worked in garden shops and in construction and finance. Conversely, they drew no link between cancer and men who worked as exterminators, landscapers, or animal caretakers. Those who were truck drivers faced an aggressive prostate cancer risk four times greater than educators — a profession the researchers used as a baseline, as they presumed educators faced none of the same “whole body vibrations” as truck drivers.

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Read the rest — Truck Drivers At Risk For Aggressive Prostate Cancer: A Theory Of Vibrations

Hair Loss InformationCould My Recent Female Hair Loss Be From Anesthetic During My Appendectomy? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

(female)
Recently i have been losing more and more hair so i decided to look at cause. I saw one was after surgery from the anesthetic. I had my appendix out recently. Is it possible my hair loss is from the anesthetic? Your help in this matter would be greatly appreciated. Thank you

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What you are asking may be possible, but I do not know if that’s what is really going on. Trying to find personalized medical answers for a diagnosis on the Internet is common and I don’t blame you, but the best help I can give you is to recommend that you see a doctor (face to face) and ask them for a medical diagnosis after they examine you in person and take a detailed medical history.

Some patients (as you’ve seen online) report some hair loss after a general anesthesia, but there can be many other medical reasons for hair loss in women.

Hair Loss InformationWill Using Chemical Relaxers Always Result in Causing Damage Over Time? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

(female)

Hi, I have been relaxing my hair for 10 years, I am currently experiencing hair loss (due to ringworm!) which has lead me into taking better care of my hair.

My question is: Is it possible to relax your hair for, say 50 years, without damaging your scalp, if you avoid burns? Or is it inevitable that you will experience some form of hair loss/acute damage? Most people I know of have some problem or other due to relaxers.

Thanks for any help you can give.

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I don’t personally know too many people who relax their hair, so I am not the best person to give you a professional opinion about this. Most of my patients are men and they usually do not relax their hair.

Hair Loss InformationWhy Aren’t You Calling Dr Christiano’s New Research a Cure? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello dr
i am with you that the research is very early, but why did you say it is not a cure? if they can create hair then we will have unlimited supply, right?

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You’re referring to — Dr Christiano’s Research Team Found That Upside Down Cells Produce New Hair

Everything is called a “cure” these days. This is still research. Don’t get me wrong — this is very exciting, but it was done in mice. It needs to be done in humans and proven both safe and effective before anyone should call it a cure. Lots of articles have come out calling this a cure, but article headlines are usually sensationalized.

Hair Loss InformationI Shaved My Eyebrows and They Never Regrew – So Should I Get a Transplant or Wait for Cloning? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Doctor Rassman
My question concerns my eyebrows. I shaved them for some reason I cannot even comprehend myself. They never came back. What makes it so much worse is the fact that i am a man. It bothers me more than anything else in my entire life has. It haunts me from when i wake up to when i go to bed. I have two questions i guess.

1. First of all, i don’t know why but i really don’t want to have a eyebrow transplant probably because it is in fact considered plastic surgery and is considered weird by most people i have asked. Also the continual growing could become annoying but i am not ruling it out. If you yourself were in my situation would you in fact have it done? Are most of your patients honestly happy with the results?

2. Second i am 25 years old now and by visiting your site learned of hair cloning. this seems like a much better option obviously but i have yet to understand if it is only for the top of your head or could it be implemented in something like my eyebrows. what i am getting at is if they cloned eyebrow hair would it grow normally (not like head hair)? if it is possible to clone eyebrow hairs then would you wait? probably not from reading your other responses. either way i really want to do something about this.

thank you so much for your time and again what do you think my best option is?

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I find it difficult to understand how shaving your eyebrows once would cause them never to grow back. Please see a doctor and get a good diagnosis. Maybe you have other medical issues that may cause the absence of eyebrows (such as alopecia areata).

Eyebrow transplantation is a very reasonable option for many men and women who do not have eyebrows (or have thin brows). Again, please consult with a hair transplant doctor for this. It is not my place to say if you should have surgery or not. This is purely a cosmetic procedure. If you think you will be a happier person for having more eyebrow hairs, then it is your prerogative. If you would like a private consultation, you can call my office (800) NEW-HAIR or (310) 553-9913 to speak to me or Dr. Pak.

At this time, cloning isn’t an option.

Hair Loss InformationMy Brother Has a Different Dad, And He’s the Only One That’s Balding – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello, just a question from yet another freaked out 20 year old.

Ok, so neither side of my family has a history of balding. The only stand-out is my brother. He’s going bald, but he had a different father than me. Could his father’s genetics have played a role in his unfortunate fate?

Also, I’ve read that a “mature” hairline is a euphemism for receding hairline. What would you say about this? Thanks for your time.

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Hair loss in most men is genetic, and it can come from either the mother’s side or the father’s side (or both).

As for the mature hairline, we have extensively written about what that is ( see here). It is not balding in the traditional sense and it is not a progressive recession of the hairline. Some men see their hairline mature and don’t see any patterned loss beyond that.

Hair Loss InformationIf You Discover Unpatterened Miniaturization In the Donor Area, Is That DUPA? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

When through densitometry you discover diffuse unpatterned miniaturization, even in the donor area in male patients, do you immediately diagnose it as DUPA or do you recommend that they rule out other causes of the miniaturization? If so, which specific tests would you recommend?

I read somewhere that a doctor told someone that low DHEA levels could cause hair miniaturization, is this true? Should someone with these symptoms get their DHEA levels checked?

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DUPA (Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia) requires extensive assessment of the donor area, which will be heavily impacted by miniaturization on such an assessment. It’s not a quick diagnosis.

I can not comment on DHEA levels and its association with DUPA, though I have written about DHEA before here.

Hair Loss InformationHormonal Differences Between Men With and Without MPB? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Are there any hormonal differences in general between men with male pattern baldness and men without MPB?

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We know that in men, testosterone gets converted into dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and it is the 5a-reductase enzyme that converts testosterone to DHT. Some men do not have the genetics markers that cause the DHT to induce the (hair) loss, though. In other words one can have a very high DHT level and never have hair loss (because they do not have the genes for genetic hair loss).

DHT can be inhibited/ reduced with drugs like Propecia (finasteride 1mg). Although women also make testosterone (lesser amounts) the impact of Propecia does not stop or reverse genetic female hair loss as it does in most men. This suggest that women’s hair loss is not related to DHT.

With all that said… I don’t know of any specific hormonal differences between balding and hairy men.

Hair Loss InformationIn the News – Boston Red Sox Player Going Bald from Playoff Stress? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Snippet from the article:

PedroiaWith all but one game decided by one run, every move has counted, meaning extreme physical and mental focus has been required from each member of the Red Sox and Tigers.

“This is probably a reason why I don’t have any hair,” Dustin Pedroia told Ken Rosenthal of FOX Sports after Thursday’s tight 4-3 Red Sox win.

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Read the rest (only if you’re a sports fan) — Dustin Pedroia Blames Red Sox’ Postseason Success for Hair Loss

Dustin Pedroia’s quote was likely in jest, as he’d been losing hair for quite some time (genetics being the reasonable assumption). Tonight is the start of the World Series, so any quote is likely enough for the sportswriters in Boston to put it in their headline.