Can Botox Prevent Hair Loss?

From the press release:

Preliminary findings have shown that BOTOX® injections into the scalp may effectively delay hair loss and even prevent baldness.

No published, peer-reviewed articles back up any of their “preliminary findings” on Botox as a hair loss treatment (nor are any photos provided of their findings). I’m only posting this for those that might be interested in it. I’ll keep my opinion to myself for now, but just remember that the link doesn’t go to an actual article. It’s a press release… and it definitely reads as a big advertisement for some clinic that provides these expensive injections.

My Eyebrows Are Partially Gray

Some of my eyebrows are gray

those eyebrows have two colours on them. they are dark at the end and then they drastically turn white towards the root. what would it mean? also, the new little eyebrows seem to be dark.

Eyebrows gray like other hair. There is little you can do about the graying other than using pencils designed for graying eyebrows or hair.

My Hair Disappears At Night!

I have minor hair loss, but it happened and is still happening during a long period of time. Last winter, i realized there was hair loss on my hair line. I have this skin condition, but my skin doctor told me that it wouldn’t make my hair disappear. I’m 15, and I don’t know what this is. Most of my family (that know about it) say that my hair isn’t disappearing but this is MY body and i know what changes are happening. Now, i have once inch of hair missing from my hair line, more hair above my ears, and the back of my neck. When my hair disappears, it does at night and sometimes after i take a shower. My hair grew very rapidly over a short period of time, and i don’t know what this is. Please, help me.

If what you are saying is that you lose hair at night because you see it on the pillow, you should do a hair count on those hairs you find. The average person loses about 100 hairs per day and regrows that number from below the skin. If you calculate this out, you will see that in three years, the 100,000 hairs on the head (losing them 100/day) will recycle. Get a good doctor who understands hair and teenagers and go about the analysis properly.

Am I receding? I am 24 years old and am very concerned

I have been seeing my hair go back every year since I was 17. I am scared that I will lose all of my hair. What can I do?

I would go on the drug Finasteride for a year and see if you can stop or reverse the loss. You have lost the frontal corner hairline as it is going up and the temple peaks are also gone. If this does not work, then a hair transplant would solve the problem very nicely.

can finasteride help temple and corner recession

Can Finasteride help recover my hair loss?

 


2017-06-21 15:26:39Am I receding? I am 24 years old and am very concerned

My Hair Keeps Going Through Seasonal Sheds That Worry Me

Dear doctor,

I am a 22 years old male with very little family history of male pattern baldness. Yet a few months ago (I think last may or april) I started to experience some drastic hair loss. I was literally shedding all over my clothes, the tub, the kitchen floor… As I grew really desperate I went to visit a dermatologist who told me I was going through telogen effluvium. I actually changed my diet at the beginning of the year by becoming a vegetarian, so I figured it made sense that my hair would undergo a moment of weakness. I took various vitamins for two months or so and things seemed to get better until october.

I have always been very sensitive to the changing of season, hair-wise, so it didn’t worry me at first, but now I find it weird that this is still going on to the present day. But what confuses me the most is the nature of my sheds. I had already noticed that I would lose hair that were a lot shorter than the others (my hair is mid-long), although they seemed to have the same thickness. This could all be a result of effluvium. However, I started to find these days hairs that were thinner than what they should be… Some of them have a normal length but are just pretty thin and fuzzy. Others are also really small… I have no visible recession of my hairline (yet ?). I can tell my hair still fall from all over my head, even in the areas never affected by AGA. But I am scared to death, are those tiny sheds a definite sign of MPB ?

I hope you will answer my message. Sorry if I made a few mistakes. Regards.

You should get baseline measurements on your hair bulk to determine the significance of the shedding, and quantify just how much hair you are losing over time.

As for a seasonal shedding, I’ve had a few reports emailed to me from readers over the years about this, but there is no medical explanation that I know of for it. Humans have asynchronous hair growth, which means that we do not shed in seasons, but do so relatively uniformly over the year.

Can I Go Directly to the Beach After a Hair Transplant?

Sun exposure directly on the grafts after any hair transplant is never a good idea. UV light negatively impacts healing and can burn the skin edge of the grafts. People often forget that these grafts, which are taken from the back of the head, have never been exposed to the sun for your entire life. You should wear a hat, and even after it has healed, you should use UV protection.


2018-05-17 08:05:49Can I Go Directly to the Beach After a Hair Transplant?

My Hair Loss Stopped When I Stopped Taking Lexapro!

I recently went through about 4-5 months of hair loss. I stopped taking Lexapro and it stopped falling out completely within 6 weeks or so. Do you believe this hair loss is permanent? Do you have any advice on what to use to promote hair growth? I hope this medication did not actually damage the follicles and I will have spots forever. I am worried. Thank you for responding.

45 year old women very nervous.

LexaproIn medicine, as in life, things are not so clear cut. I cannot say for sure if your hair loss was due to a medication such as Lexapro (escitalopram oxalate), but there are reports of hair loss with this medication. In fact, I’ve written about it in the past. So if it is the Lexapro, I would expect that this loss is temporary and you’ll need to wait with great patience for regrowth to occur. There may be other factors involved, though. This is something you need to explore with your physician and have a medical work up and a good history of events.

Can Hair Transplants Completely Cover Up Balding?

Hello doctors,

I’m a black male with very early stage thinning in a 3v pattern. I’ve been on finasteride for about two years, and am basically satisfied with the results.

I’ve talked to friends and family who might have similar patterns of thinning, and in discussing the options, several of them are skeptical about the effect transplants would have.

My question is this: what is the authoritative opinion on how well transplanting can cover up balding (specifically, can It be made to look like I have virtually no thinning?)

Your question isn’t really fair. You are asking a hair transplant surgeon who thinks about hair transplant surgery as a matter of livelihood. It’s like asking a chef if you should eat their food.

My point is you should be asking these questions to the patients who had hair transplants. You should meet them face-to-face to judge what the value has been based upon the change you see. Looking at some before and after photos has some minimum value, but face-to-face meetings like we have at our monthly Open House events in San Jose and Los Angeles give you the opportunity to see for yourself!

Hair transplants all depend on the supply of donor hair and the size of the balding area. Setting patient expectations is critical to what we do. You will never look like when you were 16 years old with regard to hair fullness. Maybe you can come close, but that depends on the number of grafts, hair color, hair texture, hair style, and skin color. For example, curly black hair on dark skin gives great coverage and fullness over thin straight black hair on while skin.


2010-08-03 10:39:04Can Hair Transplants Completely Cover Up Balding?

My Hair Was Transplanted with Micrografts Lower than My Juvenile Hairline!

Hello Dr. Rassman,

I had a couple of HT procedures in the late 90’s that placed several hundred “micrografts” and “minigrafts” into my hairline. While the result is not as bad as some of the super-pluggy transplants I’ve seen, I now know that an FUE procedure could produce much better results. The issue is that the surgeon placed my hairline too low – it was lower than my juvenile hairline, but still along the forehead muscle. Due to this, I have no room to have a “transition zone” transplanted in front of it.

Would it be possible to have my hairline taken back a centimeter or so over a few sessions by individual graft excision and then have some refinement with FUE? I have spoken to one doctor who wants to bring my hairline down further, but I am completely opposed to this (I would like it to be a little higher at the end of any repairs).

Without examining you, I wouldn’t be able to define your options (particularly based on your unique case, which might be very difficult to correct). Generally, a brow lift may essentially bring the hairline up to a level that can be worked with, but it’s really not a sure thing. There will always be some risk of scarring when you take out old grafts in the front, but with a brow lift and a surgery to bring up the hairline you might be able to have follicular unit extraction (FUE) to thin it out some. People have entertained using laser hair removal which may expose the micrograft scarring (I personally have not seen a successful one yet) and even with FUE there are issues of scarring and a risk of an unnatural appearance.

You need to find a surgeon that will work with you, and assess the risks and benefits. You have limited options, but you need an expert to analyze your problem.