Hair Doctors in the UK Remind Me of Car Salesmen – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hello, I am a 29 year old male who’s suffering from hair loss. I’ve recently been to a few consultants’ regarding hair restoration surgery in UK. Unfortunately the surgeries and the surgeons seem to be inexperienced in which I didn’t feel confident enough to go through with the surgery. Also they came across as more of sales man trying to sell me a car rather than be a respectable surgeon. I would be most grateful if you could recommend me a good surgeon, I am willing to travel to the US to get the best surgeon.

Many Thanks

Be careful not to generalize. There are immoral doctors who employ aggressive sales tactics in the United States also. There are good doctors in the UK who have good reputations and are not of the ‘used car’ variety. If you are traveling from the United Kingdom and want a hair transplant surgery in the US, you can contact Dr. Robert Bernstein in New York, which is closer than my offices in California. Dr. Bernstein was my associate for many years at NHI. Or if you don’t mind the extra 5 or 6 hours of flying time, you are more than welcome to have your procedure done at my office. If you send me your picture (which will remain confidential), my office staff can set up a phone consultation.

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I’m Not Balding, But I Have Low Iron – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hey I saw my doctor the other day and told them i was getting light headed and said it was because of not enough oxygen to the blood which is a result from iron. And I just saw coincidentally that iron has a huge effect on hair. Ive had a iron deficiency for a few years it seems. I am not balding but you think after all of those years it has put a unreverseable effect on my hair? Can I salvage some of my hair that hasn’t been nourished right? thank you

The degree of iron deficiency is not related to hair loss on a one-to-one basis. Everyone is different. If your iron is low, see your doctor and get it back to normal. It does not appear to be a hair issue.

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Regrowing Arm Hair After Shaving – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi I am 20 years old and I started shaving my arms when I was 17 or so. I have stopped that all together and was wondering if my arms will ever look like they used to because I am letting the hair grow back? Maybe they will through the hair regrowth cycle. Can you tell me about how long this process will take. Thank you so much

Shaving your body hair (in your case arm hair) will have no long term effect. Give it about 6-8 months to normalize, as that is the general hair cycle of body hair.

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Why Would a Coin Sized Bald Spot Just Appear In My Beard? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi

I have a problem which has only surfaced in the past month and is very embarrassing as i am planning to get married in the next 3 months. On the top of my chin, the size of a 1 cent coin i have a patch where no hair is growing. I have black hair but have noticed in this patch small, thin blonde hair is growing and the skin on this patch is very very smooth. I am not on any medication or anything and am not stressed so am unsure what it is. Any help is very much appreciated.

Thanks

You describe a condition that sounds like alopecia areata, but clearly it may not be as you describe it. You should see a dermatologist for an examination which would consider, amongst other things, the diagnosis of alopecia areata. For more, please see the National Alopecia Areata Foundation.

Does Seborrheic Dermatitis Cause Temporary Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I’m 18 years old (male) and I have dandruff really bad. I’m losing more hair than usual and I have no family signs of baldness. I went to the dermatologist and he said I have seborrheic dermatitis. Does seborrheic dermatitis cause temporary hair loss. My hair itches real bad and its real sore at times. If I touch my hair it hurts in certain places. I don’t think my dermatologist really knew what was wrong. What do think is my problem?

Seborrheic dermatitis, when scratched continuously, can cause traction hair loss. Seborrheic dermatitis does not cause hair loss by itself. Whatever pain or feeling you are having on your scalp needs to be evaluated by a good dermatologist. If you don’t get the answers with one doctor, get another opinion.

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Transgender Male-to-Female Taking Dutasteride – Balding Blog

Hi Dr. Rassman,

I am a genetically born male, who just turned 23 years old. I am a transgendered and just recently began taking hormones 2 months ago to transition into a woman.

At age 21, as a male, I noticed my hair thinning in the temple regions. My mother father began balding pretty heavily in his 20’s. I knew I was transgendered but was unable to afford transitioning and beginning hormones at that age so I went to two dermatologists and was prescribed Propecia both times. I was on it for a little over a year. Surprisingly after a year I seemed to have less hair in the temple region and front hairline region. I can’t say it didn’t work because who would have known if I would have lost that hair anyways and Propecia helped me loose less? I’m not sure. My hair is definitely thinner and some family noticed but it’s not “socially” noticeable.

Two months ago I stopped taking Propecia I began a female hormone regimen to transition into a female begin that I am transgendered. I take 6mg of Estrace as well as Avodart daily. I also get a monthly injection of Depot Lupron 7.5mg used to treat advance prostate cancer in men and is similar to a “chemical castration”. So needless to say my testosterone levels will be taken WAY down and hopefully Avodart will absorb the leftover DHT in my system. However, at this point, now living as a female with female hairstyles I still have an issue because my hairline has started to mature in a masculine look and it’s very thin in the temples and at my hairline.

With my situation, and based on the medication’s I am taking – should I expect more hair growth than I did on Propecia? Honestly I think I need a forehead reduction but this could be particularly tricky with my thus receed hairline. What are you suggestions, or observations? Should I give it time? I CAN NOT loose ANYMORE hair and I REALLY need regrowth! I haven’t tried Rogaine because I was told in doesn’t work in the temple region on genetic men – but now that I’m on female hormones does that change that?

PLEASE HELP ME DOCTOR!!!!!!

Thank you SOOO much for this wonderful opportunity!

You have chosen non-surgical, hormonal treatments for eliminating your male hormones. Dutasteride, although not yet FDA approved for regular male pattern baldness, is studied and believed to be more potent than Propecia (finasteride) for prevention of male pattern baldness. You are right in that using other anti-androgen medications are also important to slow down the process of your male patterned hair loss. I am not sure whether Rogaine can add anything to the medication regimen that you are currently on. You have to know that it is unlikely that you can grow your receded hair completely back and medical treatment can only prevent further loss and in some cases thicken the miniaturized hair in thinning area.

For treating the receded areas that are not recovered by the maximum hormonal treatments that you are doing and to make a female hairline, the available options include hair transplantation and possible hairline lowering procedures. The latter runs a risk if you should continue to bald from your genetics, while a hair transplant has been successfully used for people like you who have male pattern hairlines and wish to migrate to a feminine hairline. Please consider coming in for a consultation so that a Master Plan will have will be clearly defined for you.




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Transplanting the Scalp of a Cadaver to a Living Person? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I saw an episode of the Simpsons many years ago that had a premise where Homer had a scalp transplant from an executed criminal. His new beautiful head of hair was possessed. I think it was a Halloween episode. Anyway, now I’m reading that this could be true (without the possessed hair from a criminal)!

Here’s the link: USA Today – Hair-raising ideas to cure baldness

Regarding that Simpsons episode, I found what you’re talking about in a brief description here. Fantasy meeting reality? Well, not exactly.

Dr. Maria Siemionow is a plastic surgeon who has performed many face transplants in research animals. She has also shown that cadavers may have value as a source of donor scalp/hair, but I would not hold my breath for this to become clinical. The research is mostly on rats, and to my knowledge no human has ever been tested. Her focus has been using such transplants for severe injuries, like the face transplant that was done in France a few years ago. The article makes for interesting reading. Thanks for sending the link to us.

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I Was Diagnosed with Stress-Related Hair Loss or Alopecia – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Doctors,

I’m new to this blog, as I just started noticing my hair loss about 3 months ago. I’m a 30-year-old woman, and 3 months ago I had a healthy head of hair. Now it seems that every time I look in the mirror, more and more is thinned out along the part. I have a bald spot now. I’ve seen a couple dermatologists and one GP, and they’ve wavered between diagnosing me with just stress-related hair loss, or androgenetic alopecia.

I’m a little skeptical about the alopecia diagnosis because the hair loss is so fast. Like I said, 3 months ago, I was fine. I was wondering if it is possible that I may have a fungus or bacterial infection on my scalp? I travel a lot and have just returned to the US from living in Africa for the past year. It would not be the first time that I’ve somehow contracted a fungus or some sort of skin infection.

I mentioned this to my doctor and he may do a scalp biopsy. Do you happen to know, whereabouts, how much such a procedure costs? I have no insurance at this time, but regardless, it would be worth it to get it done to save my hair.

Thank you so much for any information you could provide.

You clearly have a problem and you need a good, knowledgeable doctor to manage your situation. Much can be learned by getting a hair pull test and a miniaturizationstudy. This can be done at the time the doctor visit occurs. Cultures of the scalp (to check for diseases that you may have contracted in Africa) need to be assessed as well as looking for chronic telogen effluvium, diffuse alopecia areata, and others. Good luck.

How Can I Tell if My Bald Spot Was From a Chemical Burn? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

(female) I just noticed this past week that I have a bald spot in one area of my head, the top left. The area is smooth and tender. (Tenderness may be a result of the products I’ve been applying to stimulate growth.) I am assuming that this baldness occurred after a no-lye chemical relaxer was applied, since I now vaguely remember a patch of hair coming out at that time. How can I know what caused this area to become bald and when will the hair grow back if it will? By the way it looks, it seems that nothing is happening.

Smooth skin suggests a burn (it could be other conditions, but with your memory of history a burn sounds likely). See a good dermatologist and you may get some good insights into the bald spot. If it will grow back (not a third degree burn or one that killed the hair follicles) it may grow back in 3-6 months.