Hair Loss InformationCould IVF Cause Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am 41 and have gone through many series of ivf treatments. Now that I have not been on these injectables for a year, I have noticed this past year a small nickel sized bald spots on my scalp. Starting out as a dime now up to a nickel I am getting nervous. I have 3 of them now. Could IVF have had anything to do with this? I have been to my dr last year and this year for blood tests, but everything came back great. I have “invested” in shampoo’s, vitamins, follicle treatments and nothing has worked. Even my hair hasn’t “grown” in a year. I actually stopped highlighting it for 6 months and nothing. My next step is woman’s rogaine, but the box states not for patchy hair loss. Can I use it? What can I do next?

Thanks for your help

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While I highly doubt in vitro fertilization (IVF) causes hair loss, if what you described was generalized, I would expect that the massive hormone manipulations that occur with IVF could cause diffuse hair loss. The descriptive nature of “nickle sized bald spots” is suggestive of conditions like alopecia areata. I would recommend seeing your dermatologist for a definitive diagnosis. If it is alopecia areata there is no definitive medical treatment, but the diagnosis methods are well established. Based upon the cause of the bald spot, the regrowth may be anticipated.

Hair Loss InformationConfused About Dr Strick’s Alopecia Areata Treatment – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

hi dr.,
i have a question about dr. richard strick. i went to see him because of your very positive comments about him on this site regarding his treatments of alopecia areata using his dncb treatment.

1. He claims its successful 90% of the time, if it is that successful, i would imagine the fda would approve it & other doctors would use it to treat patients because that would be a huge deal for those who have alopecia areata.

2. After speaking with him and his staff, I have heard about 2-3 contradictions (or at least apparent). For example one of his staff said “it does not work on body hair” & he said no it definitely does work on body hair. (different conversations at different times)

Basically my question to you is, do you think or would you put it past dr. strick to outright lie or maybe exaggerate about the effectiveness of this treatment for whatever reasons he may have? Im not sure what to make of this, i want to have confidence in this treatment but my confidence is shaken.

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Are you sure you heard him right? What you experienced sounds like confusing signals and you should go back to him to get clarification. To my knowledge, he does not use this dinitrochlorobenzene (DNCB) treatment for body hair alopecia areata.

I provided photos of a patient that I met with who had a great result from the treatment, so the effectiveness was clear to me. I can’t vouch for success rates, but I’d be honest with him and ask Dr. Strick to clarify some of the issues you had from your previous visit.

Hair Loss InformationWas I Misdiagnosed with Alopecia Areata If My Hair Grew Back? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Dr Rassman – In my late teens I had a bald patch appear in the back of my head that was diagnosed as alopecia areata, but it all subsequently grew back within a few months and has been normal since then. I’m now 30 and I’m thinking about a transplant to my hairline, I’m wondering if the previous alopecia areata puts me at additional risk for shock loss or any other complications (I’m already on Propecia). Thanks in advance.

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Alopecia areata will often disappear months after it first appears. There is always a risk of it reappearing at any time, but considering how many years it is since its last appearance, it seems unlikely.

Alopecia areata (AA) is often regional so if you are genetically balding (more patterned loss) and the diseased area is outside the area of your need, it can be transplanted knowing that there is a remote risk of AA appearing in the recipient area. If the desire is to transplant a bald spot created by AA, then there are two conditions that I feel must be met:

  1. The AA has not been active for at least 3 years
  2. A biopsy should be performed to rule out it being active at this time

Hair Loss InformationHair Loss and Lupus of the Skin? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’m a 43 year old African American female. I’ve used hair products all my adult life. In addition, I wore weaves from braiding and sewing tracks on my hair to gluing tracks on my hair. To braiding my hair as well. I used extensive heat from flat irons to hair dryers. Everything has come to a halt. The top portion of my hair is bald in the crown area of my head in many large spots. I had a small spot for years smack dead in the middle of my crown area and never thought anything of it. Well a month ago my hairstylist noticed the small spot is no longer there. There are huge spots now that is red and is tender. For years my scalp always felt irritated very strange… Even when I brushed my hair my scalp would hurt. I recently got rid of all the hair products that contain Sodium Laurel Sulfate and Sodium Laurel Lereth Sulfate. I purchased all natural shampoos and conditioners.

Well I went to see a Dermatologist. He kept saying something about a band…? Dead hair follicles that will not grow back. Well they did the Biopsy and now I wait. He thinks it might be Lupus of the skin…. WHAT !@&^*()(*_( What is that… My first cousin has Lupus (enternal). I’m stumped…. I am wearing wigs because my hair is not long enough to cover the bald spots… What a mess…. Your thoughts Doctor?

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You will know more when the biopsy comes back. If you don’t have Lupus, you have many causes for hair loss all listed in your first paragraph of your email to me. This is a complicated problem that will have to be evaluated with you sitting right in front of me and my obtaining the biopsy from your dermatologist. For more info, look to the Lupus Foundation of America‘s Lupus of the Skin page.

I Have a Mysterious Bald Spot that Appeared on the Side of My Head – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

DR. I have noticed a bald spot on left side of my head, it is size of bottle cap. What can I do. rest of my hair is fine. I’m 28 yrs old and also have noticed gray and white hair by side burn area. The bald spot is just above my left ear. Please help. I talked to my doctor he didn’t tell me anything.

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I would see a dermatologist, as there are many types of diseases that can do this. The possible causes are all listed in one of the chapters of my new book, Hair Loss and Replacement for Dummies. ***shameless plug***

Folliculitis and Hair Loss in the Crown – Balding Blog

I have folliculitis which has caused hairloss at the crown. Will minoxidil regrow this hair? If it does, will the hair be lost once application has stopped or will the hair continue to survive on its own as my dermatologist says I have no MPB only the folliculitis.

There is a condition called folliculitis decalvans, which is an autoimmune disease that often reflects extensive hair loss. First, one would have to make a diagnosis (something I can not do without seeing you myself). If it is just a small patch from the infection of a few hair follicles that caused hair to fall out and does not reflect an underlying disease, then it might regrow. Minoxidil may help. I can’t say much more without knowing much more about you, what it looks like, and more of your history with the folliculitis. There’s a lot of info and photos of folliculitis decalvans here.




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Hair Loss InformationIn the News – The Mystery of Alopecia Areata – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

From the article:

Every woman has experienced a bad hair day at some point. But for some women and men, a mysterious illness is causing them to lose all of their hair.

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Read the rest (and see the video) — Men, Women Battle Mysterious Hair Loss

The article (ABC 7 in Washington DC) does not provide any insight into alopecia areata since so little is known, but it does bring some attention to the topic. The video is also a good chance to see how some patients cope with the disease. For more information, see the National Alopecia Areata Foundation

Hair Loss InformationDoes Alopecia Areata Change Hair Characteristics? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Doc,
I was recently diagnosed with diffuse alopecia areata. I lost a lot of hair on my head, but the hair also got finer. I passed that off to genetics even though I’m only 19. We tried everything including cortisone injections and minoxidil, but nothing worked, so we tried oral prednisone. The hair follicles regrew, but the weirdest part was that the hair actually changed back from fine to relatively coarse. My question is: Does alopecia areata ever change the characteristics of the hair, or was the textural change a bizarre coincidence?

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Hair during recovery from alopecia areata may just return to its original texture. Then again, it may not. Diffuse alopecia areata is not fully understood as a disease process. There might be better information (including support forums) at the National Alopecia Areata Foundation site.

My Hair Loss Just Started When I Turned 50 Years Old – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hello, I’m male and have just turned 50. There’s no baldness in the family and up until very recently I’ve had a full head of hair.

My hair started falling out considerably in the shower about six months ago (Oct ‘08) and has continued up until now, to the point where I just have to run my fingers through my hair and hairs will fall onto the countertop. Unfortunately I’ve now lost a good amount of hairline and have thinned all over the top of my head.

I went to a dermatologist and supplied eleven vials of blood for testing with everything coming back negative for hair loss – minerals, vitamins, hormones, dhea, thyroid, kidney, liver & bioavailable testosterone were all within range (the last two were slightly elevated, but still in normal range).

There hasn’t been any major stress events in my recent history, nor do I feel depressed. However, I have been taking prednisone since March ‘03 after being diagnosed with adrenal insufficiency (addison’s disease) after a bad bout with food poisoning. According to the medical association hair loss is not a side effect of prednisone, but I’m guessing it is the cause of my hair loss, or possibly an autoimmune disease attacking the hair follicle’s themselves.

I was given a dandruff shampoo (Ducray – Selegel) by the dermatologist but that hasn’t slowed the hair loss down, not sure dandruff could cause this type of hair loss anyway. I’m wondering if you might have any advice that could help as this is very frustrating to say the least.

Thanks

You can guess on the mechanisms for your thinning hair, but hair loss from genetic causes can start late in life (50s). I would need to know much more about your Addison’s disease and the impact of the steroid use before discussing your case further. Prednisone can cause hair loss (see here), but dandruff isn’t a cause of hair loss.

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