No Hair Loss – Should I Be Taking Finasteride? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hey Dr Rassman! I’m approaching 23 years old, and have experienced some thinning at the temple area, and also some receding of my hair line. Although i guess this could be my hairline maturing, i’ve bought some folligen cream, Nizioral shampoo, and some proscar as a precaution. Are these products still safe to taken, even though i might not actually be experiencing any irregular hair loss? Just thought i would nip it in the bud so to speak! Thanks for your time!

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First of all, you need a proper diagnosis and that requires a good doctor to assess miniaturization of your scalp. Do not assume anything. Your hair is too important to play Russian Roulette with. You should first know what is happening to you, then discuss the options with a good doctor. Taking Proscar without knowing what is going in is a mistake.

Bald for 20 Years – Will Propecia Work? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’m 43 and completely bald except around the side of my head-I can grow hair everywhere on my body except the top of my head-lol! I’m wondering if Rogaine or Propecia has worked on guys that are already bald and I have been since I was 22 or so

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Going on Propecia or Rogaine may help prevent further hair loss, but if your skin is smooth and the depth between the skin and the skull is very shallow (atrophic skin), these medications will probably not cause you to grow hair on your ‘runway’. The reason is that when the supportive blood vessels, fat, muscle, glands and nerve tissue atrophy and die off, there is little to stimulate with these medications. If your hair loss process is stable and meets the above criteria, then there may be no point to medications. If your hair loss is not stable (some small hairs are still there and the scalp is not atrophic) then these medications may help. If your fringe area is dropping , then Propecia may stop its migration downward (to your ears). I doubt that minoxidil will have any impact, but you could try it. Propecia or Rogaine will not strengthen the follicles that have already shriveled up and disappeared, but they may help hold or regrow whatever follicles are left that are in the miniaturized state.

Permanent Problems from Propecia? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Doc,
Is anything known about the permanence of the sexual side effects of Propecia? I’m concerned about serious fertility problems if I start using this drug, and I’m skeptical of Merck’s claim that all side effects go away quickly once you stop usage (how would they know? Propecia hasn’t been around that long). I’ve just been browsing comments about Propecia on the web and, from reading about various people’s experiences with it, it’s not so clear to me anymore that this drug won’t cause a permanent problem.

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I’ve written a lot about Propecia on this site. Please do a search for Propecia or Propecia side effects to read my many blog entries about this. Quite simply, if you do not trust the drug company or the FDA, then you should not take the drug. In fact, do not take Propecia or any drug unless you have confidence in the information sources; in this case Merck and the FDA.

Looking Like Art Garfunkel – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am a 26 year old male, I’ve experienced rather quick hairloss (forehead line receeding, especially in the upper corners) over only 1 and 8 month period. It started when I began to get chest hair growing in. So I assume I’m experiencing genetic MPB due to testosterone changes. Its only getting worse. I’m new to all the drugs and treatments available. What course of action should i take? I dont want to look like Art Garfunkel.

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You have just determined the absolute identifier for reaching the age where DHT kicks in. The appearance of chest hair is the biggest sign that DHT is now working on you. As you get even older you will see nose and ear hair as well; I should know, I am 63 years old. Propecia (finasteride) is a DHT blocker that will slow down the effects of DHT, but will not stop the chest hair completely. It will also probably slow down, stop, or reverse the hair loss. I recommend that you see a doctor and get on that medication. You need to have your hair and scalp analyzed for miniaturization so that good measurements will tell you where you are going to be as the treatment takes hold.

And for those too young to know who Art Garfunkel is, this is the hair style that the question-asker was referring to: Art Garfunkel.

Hair Loss InformationHow Does Dr. Rassman Manage His Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

hi doc, what do you use for your hairloss???? what is your regime??? do you take propecia or proscar and how long you been on it??? and has it stop your hairloss??????? please be specific on what you use… details please!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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I take Propecia, and that is all I do. Propecia may have stopped the hair loss or it may have stopped by itself (I am 63 years old, so it is not uncommon in a man of my age). I had 3 scalp reductions in 1992 (big mistake) and then 2 hair transplants in 1994 and 1999. I was lucky that the first hair transplant fixed the scarring problem and the second one added bulk to the crown.

Hair Loss InformationFinasteride vs Hair Cloning – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi, I’m 21 years old and I started thinning about a year ago, primarily on the temples and in the front. I started taking 1 mg of finasteride daily about 8 months ago , and I’ve been using 5% minoxidil. My temples grew back 100% and but I’ve noticed the front is still thinning and I’ve been losing alot of hair in the shower. Is it fair to say that the finasteride isn’t working for me? I don’t know whether to let nature take it’s course and just save my money. Is there a chance that finatseride will start to kick in ? Also do you have any news on the new buzz going around about hair cloning? Is there a possibility that it will be available in the near future?

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You should give Propecia at least 18-24 months to peak out its benefit. When you say it is not working, I assume that you mean you are still losing some hair. The normal hair loss rate is about 100-150 hairs/day and with that comes another new 100-150 hairs that start growing. Could it be that Propecia reduced the rate of loss and because it is still negative, you are assuming that it is not working? Whatever you do, I strongly feel that you should stay on the drug for the full 2 years. As you have indicated that you are in Los Angeles, you should be under a doctor’s management here. We can be reached at 800-NEW-HAIR if you’d like to set up a free consultation.

Hair cloning is not coming down the short-term highway. Maybe we will see hair cloning in 5-10 years in the research stage, but for someone of your age, you have to surround your problem well before that process is on the short term horizon. For more hair cloning posts, please see the Hair Cloning category.

Confusing Information on Propecia – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

IT is funny how you waffle and change your mind on what propecia can do. I don’t understand you sometimes ..you are confusing.. sometimes you say propecia will stop hair loss and sometimes you say it just slows it down. Take a look at your blog and it is all over on how you say one thing and then another.. please look at what you wrote many different people… you use stop and slow as if they mean the same thing… thanks

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Propecia can stop hair loss, reverse hair loss and slow the hair loss process. It really depends upon the person, where they are in their hair loss process, and the expression status of the person’s genes (add to this a large group of unknowns that will become evident from researchers over time).

Sorry if I am confusing you. I write so much to handle each person’s agenda and what I write can be colored by the patient’s interpretation and the way I perceived the questions given me.

Propecia for Middle Aged Men – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Dr Rassman,
I am 43 years old and am suffering from moderate hair loss since more than one year.
My dermatologist said that I am too old to take Propecia because the clinical studies were conducted in men between 18 to 41 years. But Minoxidil (5%) caused me skin irritations. Is that right or is Propecia also effective for men older than 41? And what about the long term side effects of Propecia? Many thanks in advance for your help. Kindly regards.

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I believe that you will still benefit from using Propecia, which works well in early hair loss, somewhat independent of age. You should take a photo of your head and start Propecia, but first you should get a hair expert to measure miniaturization status throughout the scalp so that a good baseline is established and progress can be measured over time. Then 8 months later, you can evaluate if the medication works or not. Of note, no further hair loss or some growth are good signs that Propecia is working in addition to the scientific evidence you will get from the measurements.

Propecia with Hyperthyroid – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Good day Sir, I would like to ask if you can recommend propecia to me, despite of having hyperthyroid and heart problem.thanks and god bless

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I would doubt that there is a problem with Propecia use, providing that you have dealt successfully with the treatment of your thyroid problem. You need to see a doctor and have a full examination of your scalp. Confirmation of the diagnosis is critical before I would write a prescription.

As thyroid problems are a common cause of hair loss, I think this is an informative page for those intertested in learning more about thyroid disease: Hyperthyroidism.

Spironolactones and Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman, I have read on HairLossTalk, the following:

“It’s been firmly established that male pattern baldness is initiated by DHT attaching to the receptor sites on the hair follicles. Genetically, only the follicles on the top of the head are encoded with the receptor sites, which explains why hair along the side of the head and in the back of the head is not lost with age. The attached DHT on the receptor site is perceived as a foreign body and the immune system begins to destroy the hair follicle, shortening the growth phase and causing the hair shaft to become progressively finer in texture. In extreme cases, only a vellus hair remains. The good news is that the follicles have the inherent capacity to mature to their former size.

Encouraged with the success of Propecia (Finasteride) to reduce the amount of DHT in the scalp of patients with male pattern baldness (MPB), doctors and scientific researchers took another look at existing medications that are known to act as anti-androgens.

However, there have to be stringent criteria for an anti-androgen that can be used to combat or even reverse pattern alopecia. The ideal anti-androgen should have the following properties:

(1) It has to have potent anti-androgen activity (2) It should selectively prevent or successfully compete with DHT without changing testosterone levels (3) It should be effective topically, so it can be conveniently applied with minoxidil solutions and (4) Even though it’s easily absorbed into the skin, it should not have any systemic effects.

That’s a tall order. Surprisingly enough, there is such a medication: Spironolactone. For over thirty years Spironolactone has been used as an antihypertensive and a diuretic. More recently, it has been used to treat hirsutism (excess body hair) in women. Using Spironolactone to treat hirsutism may sound contradictory, but body hair (e.g. chest, face, axilla, pubis, etc.) is promoted by testosterone and since Spironolactone is a potent anti-androgen, it’s successfully used to eliminate unwanted hair on the body.

On the top of the head, where the hair is adversely affected by DHT, Spironolactone has just the opposite effect. Spironolactone exhibits anti-androgenic effects in both males and females. Taken orally, it is such a potent anti-androgen that, although it is an effective anti-hypertensive drug, it is rarely used to treat men with hypertension because of its feminizing properties, including painful gynecomastia.

However, applied topically, Spironolactone does not have any systemic side effects. Among its other properties as an anti-androgen, Spironolactone also effectively prevents DHT from attaching to the receptor sites on the hair follicles. As a result, the follicles no longer atrophy and can mature again to their normal size. And it does so without decreasing the circulating levels of DHT in the body. By comparison, Finasteride inhibits the formation of DHT, causing troublesome side effects in many patients.”

What do you have to say about Spironolactones?

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Spironolactones have been used for hair loss for decades. Early in my career, I had asked well respected dermatologists about their experience with spironolactones and the results for the treatment of hair loss. The consistent story I got from them was that they were not efficacious and patients who used them, with or without other injectable medications used in the head, had no significant demonstrated benefit. With that knowledge, the written material that you’ve sent me seems to fall flat, missing some elements of science in the practical world of clinical medicine.