Is the Consensus About Avodart for Hair Loss Mostly Positive? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Doc:

I notice that you don’t make many (if any) references to Avodart / dutasteride as an effective medication for hairloss any more. I realize that it’s not FDA approved for this use and perhaps you have some liability issues, but is the general consensus within the hair replacement community that it’s effective?

Thanks!

I can not comment on the hair transplant community as a whole. Maybe after the annual ISHRS convention in October, I will be able to report on a consensus. I had a patient yesterday who reported going from Propecia to Avodart and he did notice a complete loss of libido on the Avodart, something that he only had a mild experience with while on Propecia. I am under the impression that the DHT block is much more extensive in Avodart. I am hesitant to recommend or endorse the use of this product for treating hair loss in men unless I had some unique conditions such as the presence of diffuse unpatterned alopecia in a male that has not responded to finasteride (I don’t recommended drugs that do not have FDA clearance for treating hair loss routinely) — but if the DHT blocking in Avodart is better than Propecia, then I’d assume that equates to more protection from hair loss. Maybe it is worth another look at it for men who are losing ground on finasteride.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):


Propecia and Dandruff – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Can Propecia cause dandruff? I’ve been talking it for a couple months now and it seems to be working, but I’m noticing dandruff that I have never had before. Maybe its just a coincidence?

Sounds like it could be a coincidence. Wait it out and treat your dandruff the way everyone else does.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):


Hair Loss InformationHow Propecia Works on Hair and Why Miniaturization Mapping is Important – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Authors: Price VH , Menefee E, Sanchez M, Kaufman KD. Department of Dermatology, University of California, San Francisco published an article in the J Am Acad Dermatol. 2006 Jul;55(1):71-4. Epub 2006 May 3.

This is an important article which shows the impact of finasteride (Propecia) on the miniaturization process. It is clear from this study that Propecia produces much of its value by reversing the miniaturization process, making the hair shafts thicker, more so than growing new hair follicles. That is why it works well in people who still have hair that is being impacted by the genetic balding process, while being minimally effective in those men who lost most of their hair. The article concluded:

“CONCLUSION: Long-term finasteride treatment led to sustained improvement in hair weight compared with placebo. Hair weight increased to a larger extent than hair count, implying that factors other than the number of hairs, such as increased growth rate (length) and thickness of hairs, contribute to the beneficial effects of finasteride in treated men.”

I know that many of my readers may be tired of the constant references to mapping out the scalp for miniaturization. This scientific study, by a prestigious university, shows that the degree of miniaturization in the drug treatment for hair loss is where the benefits lie. Mapping the scalp absolutely shows from ‘whence your hair came to where your hair is going’. The measurements of miniaturization is the diagnostic backbone for the diagnosis of genetic balding, particularly when it occurs in patterns (male pattern balding or MPB). Even female genetic hair loss has distinctive patterns of miniaturization and the skilled diagnostician who commands that knowledge, is more effective in giving advice and building the Master Plan that I keep talking about. The doctor should:

  1. make the diagnosis by mapping the scalp and analyzing miniaturization
  2. document the pattern of hair loss and miniaturization
  3. use his/her knowledge to predict what should happen when a person is treated with drugs on miniaturized hairs
  4. observe what happens when the drug is used on the miniaturized hairs by repeating the mapping process periodically over time
  5. build a Master Plan based upon the degree of miniaturization and its response to drugs and/or time
  6. get to know the patient and his/her goals
  7. evaluate the transplant option when appropriate
  8. learn how the treatments (transplants or drugs) impacts the patient’s goals and the balding process based upon successive scalp mappings, and
  9. re-evaluate the Master Plan based upon the knowledge of what has happened in 1-8 above.

This 9 step process is the standard of care today and anything less than this is less than what every hair loss victim should accept.

Too many times, readers of this blog tell me that they have gone to their doctors and asked to have their hair mapped out for miniaturization and the doctors they speak with essentially call mapping ‘hogwash’ or BS. As you can see from what I wrote here and the published article I referenced above, mapping out the scalp for miniaturization is possibly the most important part of the doctor’s evaluation of hair loss. Too many doctors look at the scalp hair, run their hands through it and make a diagnosis and a recommendation based upon a naked eye evaluation (as if to suggest that there is a microcope on the ends of their fingers), but this approach brings no sophistication, little added value, and no clinical science to the ‘hocus pocus’ that has been associated with hair loss and its diagnosis. The standard of care dictates that the 9 step process outlined above is the basic minimum a patient should expect when he/she visits an expert in hair loss. The metrics of miniaturization is the foundation for the clinical diagnosis of hair loss.

Minoxidil Is Making Me Hairy! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I started minoxidil 2 months ago and it is working miricles on the back of my head. The problem is that it is now hair growing on my back and the hair on on my arms and legs is getting thicker, much thicker. I am growing hair all over my body, even the chest is hairier. When I looked at my arms, there is probably no new hair, but the hairs on my arms are definately thicker. Could I be imagining this? Is this possible?

Block Quote

Yes, this is a known, but rare side effect of minoxidil with topical applications. It was a finding that was more consistent when the drug was given in a pill form for the treatment of high blood pressure (that was its original use). I suspect that you are absorbing considerable amounts of minoxidil into your body through the skin. Skin applications of medications are not new. Testosterone is administered as a patch and so are many other medications. The skin is an excellent route for bringing drugs into the body. Your dilemma is simply to accept the new body hair along with the benefits in the crown of your head, or stop the drug and wait for it to back to your original, normal state.

Length of Hair and Miniaturization? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello, my question is this. Ive recently been take propecia but ive noticed my scalp gettin really itchy. Is that normal. One more question. If your hair is balding. Dont your hair folicules get smaller every time that they fall out. Because they get smaller they can only go to a certain length, then they just fall out again? Am i right, or would you be able to grow your hair out to a length u wanted without the hair falling out? Id hate to grow my hair and it all fall out.

Block Quote

There is a good point in your questions. When hair shows miniaturization and the hair shafts get thinner, the hair stops growing to its normal length. I suspect that the length it grows to will reflect the amount of miniaturization. The more miniaturization, the less the hair length. Many men with advanced miniaturization of the frontal hairs will notice that the hair does not grow at all. It may stay there for a few years, but eventually the hair that is not growing will fall out. The normal cycling of the hair is what is producing this problem. Hair that is not growing is not cycling into its sleep phase (telogen), and when it does go into a sleep phase, some of it may not grow back. The itchy complaint may be something that has to be evaulated by a doctor who understands skin problems. Too many possibilities to address over the internet.

Major Shedding During and After Rogaine Use – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi. I recently tried using Rogaine 5% as a hair loss prevention regiment as I noticed a mild thinning of the crown area. Let me stress that my hair thinning was just mild and that as 28 yrs old, it seemed like it was a good time to start early before it got too late years after.

However I stopped using Rogaine 5% after just 20 days! I was shedding far too many hair and did not like the texture effect it made on my hair. Most of all, I was shedding too much hair! May I add that I have never noticed any shedding of hair prior to Rogaine! However, its been over 15 days since last using Rogaine and I am still shedding like crazy!!! By just running my fingers thru my hair, I see mature hair and younger looking hair fall out.

I am extremely upset by this response. I am a healthy 28 yr old male. I talked with my doc and am now on Propecia. He was not able to decifer why I was still shedding considering everything is normal. My question is whether if you have any information why shedding of hair is still continuing after stopping use of rogaine 15 days ago?? (Also considering I have only used it for just 20 days). Also, if propecia will stop the shedding due to Rogaine. May i add again, there was no blatant shedding or any problem of hair shedding prior to Rogaine.

Thank you so much

Block Quote

Assuming that you have genetic hair loss, perhaps Propecia would be the better drug for you. I don’t believe Rogaine (minoxidil) was the right choice for treatment and it is known to produce hair shedding for a short while after starting it. The shedding should stop in a month or two.

Any New Hair Loss Drugs Coming Up? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

have you heard of any new hair loss drugs in the pipe-line;if so what sort of amount of time will they take to become available to the general public

The FDA is the place to go to look for new drugs. These drugs must go through a clinical trial and there is no assurance that a drug that starts the process will qualify to meet the safety and effective standards of the FDA. In summary, I have no way to tell you what may happen. We all have to wait out the clinical trials.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):


20 Year Old Wants Suggestion Other Than Rogaine or Propecia – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

hi , I had a question . I am vegetarian right and I just moved from india like couple of years ago , the first few years went fine but the things started getting worse like from previous year as i lost like 40% of my hair in like 8 months period and also my hair has started going thin and if it goes like this , I would be going bald in like next 4 months . I am just 20 right now and it all started last year so I am also too young to think about hair transplant . I have been to all the best clinics in toronto .. hairclub they all recommend propecia and rogiane n they told me about that but i am worried about taking them because i used rogaine for a while but it didnt work so If you could suggest me anythin. really it would be appreciated. thanks

At 20, the only drug I’d recommend that you take would be finasteride (Peopecia). In my opinion, if you don’t take it and it is genetic, you will be bald. Be sure that this is genetic balding and then get on that drug before it is too late. Take charge and start treatment now. Do I sound repetitive?

Buying Propecia Online — Is It Really Finasteride? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi, I was wondering about these websites online that “prescribe” and sell Propecia for a much-reduced price. Am I guaranteed to get finasteride from these sites? Or are they just big time scams. I just bought my first month’s supply at about $70. The price really worries me, especially since I want to continue finasteride long term.

The key to buying any medication over the internet is to determine if the source (manufacturer) is a known producer of quality drugs and the chain from manufacturer to you is unbroken by folks who can substitute fake drugs into that chain. Now that there is freedom to sell finasteride in the U.S. market in the 5mg dose (the U.S. Patent that restricted this has expired), there are drugs appearing on the market which have FDA clearance. If there is really FDA clearance, then the drug is most probably what the label says it is. There have been, however, reports that a black market in drugs is appearing in the U.S. and even pills purchased by U.S. pharmacies are being substituted with fake drugs that have little or no drug in them. The pharmacies have a responsibility to guarantee the authentic nature of such purchases so when you talk about guarantees, then there is a sort of purchase guarantee covered by the pharmacy’s license to do business in the states where they operate. When you purchase drugs over the internet, there is no way to guarantee the source or the quality and even fake pills that look like the originals pills may not be real. This is a problem not only for drugs like Propecia/finasteride, but for drugs like Viagra which may look like the real thing and are only sugar in reality. This is a growing problem and there seems to be great profits for those without any sense of honor and who chase the almighty dollar. Expensive cancer drugs or AIDS drugs are falling victim to this process as well. As I’ve said before, it is a ‘buyer beware’ business so to help our patients, we purchase Propecia directly from Merck and sell it ‘at cost’ to our patients as a convenience to them.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):


Left Side of Scalp Is Different From My Right Side – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Dr Rassman,

I am a 26 y/o asian male who started experience significant hairloss in the last couple years. My right temple is receeding and there is slight thinning on the top of the crown. I started taking propecia about 3 months ago. It has been effective in the crown area but not for my frontal hairloss. The odd part is that I do not lose any hair at my left temple (or the left side of my head in general) but I am experiencing significant hairloss in my right temple. I would also like to mention that i have straight hair on the left side of my head, while the right side of my head is more wavy hair. I also notice some dandruff and bulbs in between my hairs on the right side of my head. My hair loss is causing me much emotional distress and i am almost afraid to even touch the right side of my head b/c i am afraid of losing more hair. It depresses me just looking in the mirror b/c my hairline is nothing close to straight. it appears as if i have my hair combed over when in actuality it is standing straight up. I know you mentioned that you recommend being on propecia for 8 months prior to getting a hair transplant. I really would like to get a hair transplant to fix my hairline. If i stay on propecia for 8 months, will I experience any shock loss? I am concerned b/c although there is noticable recession of the right temple, it is not drastic. I appreciate your help, and I do not know what I would do without your blog!

You should be evaluated by an honest and competent doctor. Depending upon the hair loss and what it looks like, a good doctor can usually predict what will happen to you and build a Master Plan around that. Transplants may be in your future, but there is no substitute for a good doctor/patient relationship. Since we seem to be bonding, you can send me photos (good ones) and I will give you an opinion (which will not be posted here without your permission, so do not worry about that).

Timing is everything. Yes, you might be able to get a hair transplant provided that you are on Propecia. There is often a difference between the two sides, one side being more advanced than the other. If you let nature takes its course, the retarded side will catch up, but the key here is to not let it catch up. Stop it with Propecia and eventually (timing is everything) fix both sides of the frontal hairline.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):