DHT Blocking Foods? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

You mentioned in a tidbit that there were people who blocked DHT with eating large quantities of dht blocking foods. What might those be, and could we get similar results by ingesting these foods. By the way, thanks very much for doing this blog. It is extremely interesting and informative.

To the best of my memory, the drug finasteride was derived by work done in primitives who ate a tuber that was unique to the rain forest and contained this drug. I am not familiar with other foods that contain it. The high incidence of hermaphrodites in the population is what clued explorers into the uniqueness of the foods these people ate, mainly because the food was eaten by pregnant women, blocking the effects of DHT which is required to differentiate the sex of the offspring. If you find hermaphrodites somewhere eating large amounts of some unique food, that might be a good clue.

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Is a Balding Man Shallow? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am sorry to say that I am a shallow 28 years old former male model who has believed over the years that my looks were everything. I never had a problem with women until I started to lose my hair. The more the hair came out, the more my dating life and my sex life went downhill. Then after a while, the dandruff started and now, not only am I balding, but I drop snow from my head all over the place, leaving a trail of white flakes everywhere I sit. Is this all connected? Is god making me pay for my pretentious and shallow life of the past? I am suffering, really suffering, so please do not laugh at my email and help me.

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You are in the sensitive years when hair loss appears if you are genetically predisposed to it. If the hair loss is early, Propecia usually works nicely, but if you lost much of your frontal hair, then some of the loss may be too late for Propecia and only hair transplants can help. In any event, Propecia works well to prevent your future loss and help restore more recent loss. You may also have some skin disorder causing the flaking (or as you describe it, “snow”) that you are talking about. See a good dermatologist and find out what you have and what else it might be. It could be something simple — or something severe like psoriasis. Get a good doctor to help with a diagnosis and get your hair mapped out for miniaturization.

I can not judge what is in store for you. I do believe that each of us has the power to take command of our lives. You can elect to go bald, spread “snow” everywhere you go and withdraw into some closet, or you can address your hair loss properly, get the dandruff diagnosed and treated, and get your mental state into a place where a woman may find that you are a man of substance. I suspect that you recognized that the old, shallow you now understands that depth of character in women or men is what makes us what we are. I do not mean to lecture you, just to tell you to stop suffering, resolve your hair and scalp problem, and then face who you are by starting to look beyond the mirror, at the man who stares back at you. Hopefully when you were a model, women saw more than a hollow shell of a Ken doll. Become that person!

Laser Treatments at NHI – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Greetings!
I had hair transplants last June. They’re growing in great!
I received a letter from you yesterday in which you mention you are experimenting with low level light therapy laser. I’m interested, but could you send me more information? Specifically, what kind of time commitment is needed? The letter says three sessions per week, but not if it’s one week or several weeks.
Thanks!

The recommended treatment by those that are experienced with lasers (not me) are three times a week for 6 weeks, then twice a week for another 6 weeks, then once a week for the remaining one year. If it works, more might be better. I can not attest for its value at this time. You can start it and quit anytime. For our existing hair transplant patients, there is no charge for the treatment.

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Remember to Vote for Balding Blog – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

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This is the last reminder to please vote for Balding Blog in the annual Medical Weblog Awards! When you click the link below, find the little circle to the left of “Balding Blog” (4th in the list), then click the Vote button. It just takes a few seconds of your time and is very appreciated.

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Hair Loss InformationCompassion for Balding Men – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am down right angry about everyone targeting balding men as the butt of jokes. People do not understand that behind every bald man, is a feeling sensitive man and I wish that people will stop jabbing at us.

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In this week’s issue of The New Yorker magazine (January 9, 2006; pages 43-48), there is an excellent article about hair loss titled “The Power of Hair”, by Burkhard Bilger. There is a great quote in the article from an anonymous source that says, “The man who isn’t bald never thinks about baldness. The man who is losing hair never thinks about anything else.” It is full of wonderful stories about balding looking backward in time, and looking forward to genetic cures, cloning, and some of the recent work done on an experimental basis. The article is worth reading, concluding from a patient who had a hair transplant, “Having hair on your head, you feel like you’re still young. You feel like you’re alive. Nobody wants to look old, man. Nobody want to look old.”

Hair Loss InformationMy Connection to Merck, Again – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman. It’s obvious through the few blogs that I’ve read that you have no faith in any hair restoration product other than Propecia. You have mentioned Avodart, but it’s quite clear that you are a proponent of finasteride.

There are decades of successful clinical trials with natural herbs (simply look in the PDR for Herbal Medicines or online at PDRHealth.com to find them). For example, saw palmetto has been tested against finasteride many times with virtually equal results (both with BPH and hair restoration). Foti root, grape seed extract, green tea, amino acids and other nutrients also have significant clinical data behind them to show that they are and can be effective at halting or slowing the effects of androgenetic alopecia.

Since you discard the thousands of other proven products that exist and have helped millions of men over the decades, I have to ask… are you in some way connected to Merck or Propecia? Are you a stock holder? Are you on a board of directors? Are you compensated by Merck for speaking engagements, travel, endorsements, etc?

Do you have any affiliation whatsoever with Merck that could possibly sway your opinion?

If so, I think it’s important that you share this information with your readers and patients. And as you know, it wouldn’t be difficult to find out on our own.

Respectfully

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I’ve answered this question before, but I am glad that you are inquiring if I am being paid by Merck to speak highly of Propecia. For the record, I do not work for Merck, am not on its payroll and have never been paid one dime for any of my opinions or activities in recommending a good drug. I do not own the drug company’s stock and have never purchased it. I also prescribe aspirin, and many other prescription drugs and am not on any other drug company’s payroll either. As a hair transplant surgeon, I make a living by doing hair transplants. Thus, some might say that it is not in my best interest to endorse a particular medication to help grow hair or stop hair loss, but I will of course do it if that is best for my patients. As a physician with sincere interest in my patients’ well beings, I will endorse any medicine with clear, concrete medical data that help’s my patients improve thier hair loss situation. As of now, Propecia and Minoxidil have been shown through many studies to improve hair growth or stop hair loss. Through my experience, I have noticed Propecia to have a better effect than Minoxidil when genetic hair loss is in full swing (for men only). I am not convinced of the many herbal remedies because there is no scientific data to support the many claims that are made by so many of the herbal companies.

When I recommend Propecia to stop or reverse hair loss, one might say that I am undoing my business because a successful treatment with hair loss reversal will not produce a hair transplant for my practice. That must mean something to the reader, because I do this for the benefit of my patients. That is what my Oath is about, to take the interest of my patient above my own at all times. Nothing makes me happier than to have a successful drug course of treatment. I bond with these men and they send me their balding fathers, brothers, uncles, best briends, etc. Losing one patient to Propecia brings many friends and family, so I get back far more than just appreciation, although as a doctor, appreciation is all I hope for. I just met a patient who I sent home with Propecia, because he was too early to get a hair transplant and would not get a benefit from a transplant without first trying Propecia. If it has a chance to get him his results without surgery, that is better than rushing into a transplant. He had just seen another doctor who told him that he needed 2,000 grafts. What do you think? I get a growing, thriving surgical hair transplant practice just because I care and want to be the best doctor I know how to be.

Search Results for “seasons” – WRassman,M.D. BaldingBlog

I have heard some of my patients reporting that they lose hair during certain seasons. Humans have asynchronous hair cycling, which means that we generally shed uniformly over the entire hair cycle of about 36 months. We lose about 100 hairs per day and replace that number each and every day. Animals have synchronous hair […]

Hair Loss InformationHappy New Year! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Happy New Year!

Once again, I am taking a few days off, so today’s entries will stand until more updates are entered on Tuesday, January 3rd, 2006. I have enjoyed the many questions asked of me and I hope that my words are comforting and educational to the readership.

A special thank you goes out to all readers of this site for helping to make 2005 such a great success. In just 8 months since this blog launched, there are now over 750 posts! I just hope that you have found BaldingBlog.com to be an informative (and possibly even entertaining) daily source for hair loss related discussion. 2005 was a great year for both the blog and the New Hair Institute. 2006 should prove to be even better!

I wish everyone a safe and Happy New Year! Now it’s party time!

 

Hair Loss InformationWhat Is Body Dysmorphic Disorder? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

My doctor told me that I was body dysmorphic. I looked it up and got upset with my doctor. It suggested to me that he thought I was crazy.

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There is a psychological condition know as “Body Dysmorphic Disorder” which cosmetic surgeons of all kinds (i.e. not just hair surgeons) have come to be familiar with. It is characterized by a feeling that one is deformed or very odd looking in some way when in fact one’s appearance is normal. Manifestations can range widely, from believing that one’s nose is malformed (anyone famous come to mind?), to perceptions of imperfection in one’s hairline. These patients have a preoccupation with their appearance that borders on obsession, and they often have multiple cosmetic surgeries to address the “problem”, often moving from surgeon to surgeon. Since the “deformity” is really a problem with self-perception, and not with the body itself, surgery rarely cures and often exacerbates and reinforces the individual’s feeling of deformity. The key to diagnosis is the dramatic disconnect between a normal appearance and the patient’s exaggerated feeling of being defective. A normal patient usually looks to improve their normal appearance, and they do not believe it is a deformity.

Some people (like Jimmy Durante and W.C. Fields – very old movie stars) played up their huge and pock marked nose deformities and exploited them for profit as part of their persona. This is not Body Dysmorphic Disorder, but just simple good business exploitation of a body part, similar to what Marilyn Monroe or Brigitte Bardot did to another extreme.