Hair Loss InformationHair Loss at a Young Age Lead to Problems with Alcohol Abuse – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello,
I’m a 46 yr old male. My brother was killed in a horrific car accident when I was 9 yrs old. Shortly after my hair began to fall out in dime size patches. By the time I was 10 my hair was completely gone. Docs said it was alopecia and they began a regiment of cortisone shots in my scalp. It was pure hell growing up with no hair as kids are so cruel. I wore a wig through the 10th grade and finally got rid of it by 11th.

I write this because I know giving kids a false sense of the hair growing back will ultimately do more harm than good. To fit in I hung out with the drinking crowd and I’ve been paying for that ever since. I slowly became a high functioning Alcoholic. Being in the USAF working flightlines where drinking after work was the norm and promoted did not help.

I’ve come to realize that drinking was just a symptom of my deep routed problems which began when I was 9. Fear and the fear of rejection were my underlying problems. I feel you have to be straight with kids and get them into counseling at a young age. This will do wonders for self confidence and spirit. If someone had got me some help with dealing with emotions at that tender age it would have saved me a lot of time and bruised knuckles.

I counseled a kid when I was stationed in the UK and his mother was almost in tears when I told her that I knew what her young son was going through! I don’t know why I felt compelled to write this but maybe it will help someone out there

Take Care

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Thank you for sharing this with us.

Wife Feels Pulling Sensation on Her Hair Each Morning – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi, My wife and I recently moved her from Thailand, my wife is Thai. Since we have been here she complains that her scalp hurts every morning when she gets up – she describes it “as if somebody is pulling my hair”. The pain eases in intensity during the day to say 30%, but arrives at full intensity the next morning. Thai women seem to shred hair anyway, but this seems to be greater now though the loss of hair is not visually apparent.

Any ideas

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She might be stressed from moving to a new country. Stress does strange things. Remember that the average person loses about 100 hairs per day so the hair you see in the shower or on the brush may be her normal daily loss. She will grow back about the same number each day and once it breaks through the skin it will grow at about 1/2 inch per month until it gets to her normal length. I don’t know what the pulling sensation might be otherwise.

Gray Hair in a 7 Year Old – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi, My son is 7 years old and I noticed a strand of grey hair on his head. Please let me know as to how this is happening and what can I do to prevent it further.

This is a genetic process, so my initial thought was that genetics would be the likely cause. Something has probably triggered the premature graying. Some people feel that this is an errant gene, like a chimerism in your son. There are a series of vitamin deficiencies that could also cause it, including vitamin B-12, although these are found in many foods. Some disease syndromes can be associated with it as well. See DrGreene.com for more information.

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My Hair Looks Thin Under Direct Light, But I’ve Seen No Recession – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I have one of those panels right above my bathroom mirror with lightbulbs, and whenever I look at my hair in the mirror, the front looks like it’s thinning as I can see scalp. But my hairline is the same as it’s been since I was 15 (10 years ago) — no recession whatsoever that I can tell. And my hair does not seem to look like it’s thinning in the temples but rather in the general frontal area from temple across the middle and to the other temple. Furthermore, when I come out of the shower I comb my hair back, and then I take a handheld mirror, and bend over so I can see the top of my head in the mirror, the front of my hair looks like it’s thinner than the middle or back from the top view. From this description only, what would you make of this?

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When your hair is wet, you might have more see through hair. Also, as you age, some people get finer hair. Under direct light, your hair may appear thinner. It doesn’t sound like you have any hair loss, and I really can’t suggest anything for you to try.

Will Hair Pulled Out With the Root Grow Back? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Doctor,
Is it true that hair pulled out with it’s root will never grow back? Thanks

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A while ago, one of my patients was mugged in East Los Angeles (not a good part of town). As he was getting roughed up and his wallet taken, he was held by his hair (which was about a year out of his surgical procedure of 3000 grafts) and they broke his nose. After they got his money, they kicked him, pulled out his new 5 inch long hair, and he fell to the cement. The police and ambulance came and when they wanted to take him to the emergency room, he refused to go to the hospital and had the ambulance deliver him to my office, all bloody. Crying about his hair and the ordeal he’d just been through, he told me the story. I reassured him that the hair will grow back and strongly urged him to have his face sewed up and his broken nose attended to.

In most cases, pulled hair (from the roots) grows back. That man came back to see me 6 months later with most of the hair now growing out. He was very appreciative.

Psoriasis and Lice – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

i have a friend and her little girl had head lice and she has psoriosis. the question is if you have psoriosis can you still get head lice

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Psoriasis and lice are not related, and having psoriasis is not protective to having head lice. I suspect the lice won’t be as happy living in the midst of a psoriatic scalp, but beggars can’t be choosers. Kidding aside, psoriasis is a skin condition and lice is a parasite infestation. You can have a combination of each independently.

Hair Loss InformationDeceptive Marketing, Questionable Ethics, and the Hair Transplant Network Lawsuit – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I read that [name removed] is suing the hair transplant network since they expressed their reservations about him and his questionable ethics, deceptive marketing practices, as well as issues with his hair transplant technique both FUT and FUE. I also believe that you are the person who invented the FUE technique. Is that right? Do let me know since I would want to know if this doctor is as good as everybody says he really is.

Regards

[Editor’s note: The above question has been changed to omit the names of the doctors and to avoid adding fuel to the fire]

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FightYou ask a loaded question, but I will keep this as simple as possible, even though it will get quite lengthy.

FUE and the doctors that use this method:

Yes, I introduced the follicular unit extraction technique (FUE) back in 2002 at the International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS) conference in Chicago and published the classic article on the subject in the Journal of Dermatologic Surgery that same year. FUE as a new procedure had many people interested, but when the doctors actually began to use the technique, they quickly realized that it was tedious, difficult, and required a real change in the way the surgery would be delivered, so in the long term it was not welcomed by most of the surgeons. Even today with the attention to detail required to minimize damage from the technique, it is not routinely offered by many doctors. However, with increasing demand by the consumer, more and more doctors seem to claim “expertise” (even if they can’t do it well) since there is a lot of money to be made in offering this service. Putting 2000 holes into a person’s scalp does not mean that 2000 viable grafts will be produced that will eventually grow into a nice head of hair. So some doctors offer a service and simply can’t deliver the goods. Being a “minimally invasive” surgery, FUE is certainly a great procedure and it sells well so marketing it is not difficult. It is virtually painless in the post operative period and it leaves virtually no detectable scarring (small punctate scars) unless the head is shaved, but most patients do not realize that there are also limitations and problems with the FUE procedure itself, such as how you will not know if it worked for a good 8 months after it is performed and if the surgeon could not perform the procedure as promised, the check will have cleared his bank account. Unfortunately, there are deceptive marketing practices everywhere you look and as I always say, let the buyer beware.

At the recent ISHRS physician meeting in Montreal last week, many doctors were claiming to do FUE in numbers that boggle my mind. I would say that some of the claims I heard by some of the doctors were unbelievable, and as that is my personal opinion (as the inventor of the procedure), it is an opinion that needs to be shared with you. In the next week or so right here on BaldingBlog and on the NHI site, I will publish an extensive discussion on FUE, which I’m presently writing with the goal of educating consumers about spending thousands of dollars on a procedure that could fail. I want to provide tools that might help them avoid getting trapped into deceptive practices that may be relatively commonplace. Stay tuned for more on that.

Legalities and understanding how these Internet marketing sites work:

With regard to the litigation, the sponsoring agency central to the lawsuit is the Hair Transplant Network (HTN) and they have been fairly open about the problems as they see it. Although it is no secret, I must point out that HTN levies fees to doctor members for their participation in advertising and promotional activities. They maintain the position that they have a responsibility to judge the value of the doctors’ services and the doctor’s ethics. They restrict their membership only to doctors they feel are worthy, ethical, competent as well as those doctors who are willing to pay them their monthly participation fee for their services. You can imagine that such a set of activities can not only rub some of the doctors in the field the wrong way, but could be frankly damaging to the doctor’s worldwide reputation. The damage comes from either comments that might be made that denigrate the doctor’s skills by directly discussing his/her practice, services, or ethics, or by excluding specific doctors who are not paying the monthly marketing fee when the site’s contributors discuss the best doctors in the field. It is like saying, “to be a great doctor, you have to be willing to pay the monthly fee”. An omission of a doctor from the “best doctor list” itself can be perceived as a statement reflecting the unworthiness of a doctor to potential buyers who are shopping for hair transplant services. HTN is a privately held business and will do what its owners believe are in the best interest of HTN, their audience and readership, the consumer, or their participating doctors. The doctors involved in this particular litigation also have their own self-interest and self-preservation focus. What claims are made about a doctor’s ethics or skills may or may not be true, so how this particular litigation unfolds will tell us much about the facts as the legal process goes forward. For those interested in reading more from the HTN’s side of things, follow the thread on their forum and draw your own conclusions on truth and justice.

Conflict of interest:

There are three words that trouble me with regard to all of the “consumer advocacy” sites and web forums — “conflict of interest“. As stated above, doctors have to pay HTN and other such sites to be included among the list of recommended doctors. Promoting member doctors can be costly and the crux of any business is to have income that exceeds expenses (therefore producing profits), and I am fully in favor of the capitalistic business model. There is no doubt that I am very much into free enterprise, provided that fairness, honesty, and truth remain central to the business process where conflicting interests and the profit motive do not outweigh the integrity of the process.

So there’s my 2-3 cents, and I hope it gives everyone something to think about.

Can Food Make Dermatitis Worse? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

are there any foods that may make dermatitis worse?

Yes, it seems that there are — see Atopic dermatitis and food hypersensitivity reactions. All allergies have common links that make something like atopic dermatitis behave like other skin allergies.

Then again, the reverse may also be true — see Dermatitis Research.

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More Johnny Depp and Hair! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Sorry to bring this up yet again! I notice people ask you about Johnny Depp a lot. I’ve always really liked his hair and I too have noticed that he sometimes appears to be balding. I’ve seen a lot of photos in magazines, and now I see this online too: jezebel.com

Is it possible that he is balding and just uses some sort of cover-up sometimes? Thanks for the great blog, by the way.

Anything is possible, but I don’t think that this is balding. What you may be seeing is that when the hair is parted, the scalp is showing. We don’t know his density, but the black (or dark brown) hair and white skin accentuates the scalp. If he comes in for a miniaturization study, I will tell him if he has early miniaturization, but I wouldn’t publish that online for confidentiality reasons.

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What Doctor is Recommend for Chemical Burn? – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman:

Regarding a chemical burn from blonde highlighting: 20 YO female was under hair dryer c. 4-5 minutes when burning sensation was felt on the L upper scalp; a 30 volume developer was mixed w/ionic powder with foil wraps. A baseball sized area now (6 mos or so later)has damaged hair follicles requiring two surgeries (apparently infusion for hydration first and then some over-flapping of productive skin over damaged skin ?). To properly examine this area to determine what caused the burn, would you recommend examination by a dermatologist or some other medical specialist?

Thanks so much.

I would recommend an examination by a dermatologist for chemical burns to the scalp that caused hair loss. I’m not clear if you were just told two surgeries would be required, or if you actually had two surgeries to correct this. If you have had surgery, you might want to get a second opinion if you are not comfortable with the management or the outcome.

I think I have more questions for you than answers. I think an examination is critical for me to make any sense of your case.




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