For men with genetic balding, stress-induced hair loss often does not return.
2018-04-11 09:38:452018-06-21 08:58:39Will Stress Induced Hair Loss Return?
For men with genetic balding, stress-induced hair loss often does not return.
2018-04-11 09:38:452018-06-21 08:58:39Will Stress Induced Hair Loss Return?
This is a publication from the Kaiser Wellness Journal written by my son Sean Rassman, an orthopedic surgeon moved by a motivational speaker
Woe is me vs. Wow is me – what’s your take?
Published July 9, 2015
By Sean O. Rassman, MD
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Fontana
Of all the physician off-sites and speeches I have attended in the last nine years, the personal life story told by my colleague, Dr. Kent Miyamoto, had the greatest impact on me. I am sure each physician who heard him speak that day took away something different. What touched me most about his story was not what one may think — the precariousness of life — but what he felt as a patient. He said that he had tried to thank his doctor for saving his life and his gratitude was met with, “I was just doing my job.” He indicated that he actually felt a bit dismissed and cheated by the response.
This made me rethink all of my patient interactions. What we do is more than just a job to the people we treat. I may see up to 40 or more patients on a clinic day, each scheduled for 15 minutes. In reality, I may have even less time than this, due to my seemingly always overbooked schedule. Many days I go through clinic stressed. I work straight through every lunch and often stay an hour or more after my clinic to finish up and then respond to patient messages. I will admit that I have felt frustration and even anger towards patients who try to extend their 15-minute appointment into 20, 30, or sometimes 45 to 60 minutes. I have thought too many times, “Don’t they know how busy I am and how many other patients are on my schedule?”
There was something about Kent’s story that made me realize, although we may only spend 15 minutes with a patient, that 15 minutes is amplified in so many ways.
Often, patients wait weeks or months to see me and may drive for an hour or more in each direction. They may give up several hours of a day for a 15-minute appointment with me. It is likely that all of their family, friends, and perhaps even coworkers have heard about that upcoming appointment. Many patients have likely spent hours thinking about it, discussing it, trying to anticipate what the doctor will say, and, after the appointment, may spend additional hours trying to make sense and summarize that 15 minutes with all of those in their lives.
I realized I had the choice to see these appointments as something that I needed to get through or 30 to 40 opportunities to make a tremendous impact in people’s lives and the hundreds of friends and family who are impacted by that illness. This is both an honor and a weighty burden.
I asked myself, what would happen if I tried to use the 15 minutes not just to “satisfy” or placate patients, but what if I could use that time to wow or amaze them with by showing them that I not only understand their problems, but that I care about them?
Switching to this attitude resulted in a mental shift and I began to look forward to my clinics more as opportunities to make daily, meaningful impacts and perhaps even amaze a few people.
This mindset is something to which I must frequently rededicate myself, particularly when dealing with difficult patients. Whether they are abusive or manipulative, they can contribute significant stress and one or two difficult patients can ruin a physician’s entire day.
I will probably remember little of our motivational speaker from that meeting last year, aside from the fact he liked to climb mountains, but I will always remember Kent’s story and the impact it had on me.
In the past, I was often guilty of brushing off the compliments of grateful patients, because I knew I had a chance to reduce their 15-minute appointments and use extra minutes on difficult patients.
I used to focus on trying to get out by 5 p.m., but came to realize, if I focus on providing not only excellent orthopedic care, but also emotional and psychological care, even if it means I finish 30 or 60 minutes later, I would leave happier and more satisfied.
Now, I make it a point to try and own the difficult patient, even though I have to accept that I will not be able to positively affect each one. Coming up with ideas for dealing with the difficult patient are the things I struggle with most. Here are some that work for me:
1. Attempt to empathize. It may change your own perspective and reactions.
2. Make sure the patient knows that you are truly listening. Sometimes that is all you can do.
3. Make sure the patient does not feel brushed off; something the patient believes other providers have done.
4. Accept that you may need more time with that patient; that you may leave late and try to somehow see this as a positive challenge.
Sometimes, the angry, difficult patients can become the most grateful and sometimes the challenge and joy can be flipping them from angry to amazed.
2020-01-07 09:59:202020-01-07 10:06:59Woe is me, Wow is me, What’s you take? (By Sean Rassman, M.D.)
I was wondering, I looked at a post on newhair.com about two post operative examples where they had minimal to no scabbing/crusts. After my hair transplant I was instructed to wait 24 hours before washing, I washed gently by pouring baby shampoo mixed with water over my head. I did this daily. Now at 8 days post-op, I have quiet a bit of scabs still. The scabs that fell off also shed hairs. I was reading on Wikipedia an article about hair transplant and it stated “Scabs adhere to the hair shaft and increase the risk of losing newly transplanted hair follicles during the first 7 to 10 days post-op.” This has me concerned, as I have bald spots throughout the hair transplant and was shedding scabs as early as day 4. I read through your posts and you had mentioned that you try to reduce scabs as much as possible. Will my prolonged scabbing at day 8 effect my outcome? I washed my hair 3 times today and let it soak but the scabs are still not falling off yet. And as I mentioned, there are bald patches where the scabs came off with the hair.
The key is to wash it the very next day and use a surgical sponge filled with shampoo, rolling the sponge over the recipient area over and over again until all of the crusts are off. Pouring soapy water alone will not work. The Wikipedia report came from a medical article I wrote which you can read here: https://newhair.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/mp-2006-graft-anchoring.pdf
Below is an example of what a post operative patient should look like one day after surgery (2150 grafts) with good washing techniques as discussed above. If he keeps washing his graft area, the terrible crusting seen without washing will never develop.
2019-10-14 04:22:492019-10-14 06:19:57I failed to get the scabs off of my recipient area
I am a 42 year old female with diffuse hair loss diagnosed as androgenic alopecia from a scalp biopsy. I am currently being treated with Yazmin, continuous active pill, spironolactone 200mg and Avodart since May 2006. I have had significant progress but some reaction (dry and itchy) to the spiro. I am considering trying a different protocol because I don’t like being on 3 meds especially when I am not gettin as much improvement as I would like, and some concerns about being on 3 medications. I looked in to a hair loss clinic that uses the following combination – 1. An herbal DHT blocker that includes many supplements I have read about for hair loss, 2. A topical treatment that include minoxidil in a carrier solution to neutralize the negative effects of etoh on the scalp, 3. Regular in clinic laser therapy that has 70 lasers (as opposed to 1 used in the comb) 4 A co-enzyme to stimulate hair growth. Do you think this regime is a viable alternative to the three medications? I know any of these treatments takes months to show effect so I am trying to make as informed a decision as possible since the prospect of counting 250 hairs in the shower again is very scary to me.
You are on several treatments and are considering more. Of those treatments, some are not proven effective for women with male pattern baldness and some have exclusive and limited indications. The DHT blocker finasteride has been studied in women with androgenetic alopecia. Although effective for men, this medication was not proven to be effective for women. Dutasteride (Avodart), another DHT blocker, has never been studied for this purpose in women.
Using lasers for treatment of hair loss has been controversial and although advertised extensively, is not yet (in my opinion) proven to be effective. If it helps at all, the benefit will be new hair growth in the 10% range. Application of spironolactone for treatment of alopecia is limited to some patients with elevated levels of androgen. Topical DHT blockers have a theoretical value in men, but they have not been studied and should be no better in women than systemic DHT blockers like finasteride.
You seem to be determined to fight the baldness, an admirable trait. The best thing you can do is to find a good dermatologist for a thorough evaluation to be assured that you do not have a medical cause of hair loss which is common in women. Using anecdotal modalities for treatment of your condition may be disappointing at the end, let alone the money and time that you lose.
2007-03-19 15:34:572007-03-19 16:02:55Woman with Androgenic Alopecia Being Treated with Avodart
Hi Dr. Rassman,
I’m a 22 year old Caucasian male who has experienced some recession due to maturation of the hairline (I hope so anyway). As a teenager I wore my hair long, and I now have long hair again. My question is, is it normal for my bangs to look and feel thinner since there is a higher hairline, and hence, less hair to drape down? And if so, is this a commonly reported phenomenon? Thanks!
This may reflect the miniaturization at the leading edge of the hairline, the first findings for hair loss. If your hairline just got higher due to maturation, I wouldn’t expect your bangs to appear tin. It’s tough to know what you’re seeing without examining you, though.
Does this “tug of war” refer to the idea that your body responds to fin by increasing 5AR enzymes and therefore DHT in response to finasteride? Or does this refer to the idea that even if you inhibit 70% DHT with fin, or 90% with dut, it simply may not be enough to stop genetic balding?
The later. Also it assumes that you can stop the Apoptosis (programmed cell death) that hit hair follicles after they go through a specific number of hair cycles that are programmed in our genetics. Generally, finasteride prolongs the growth cycle and reverses the miniaturization of those hairs that are miniaturized. Given time, if the genes are strongly influencing the hair follicles, these drugs may fail over time.
2020-12-21 03:02:352020-12-21 11:12:10Wondering if bodily resistance to fin/dut is possible
I had a hair transplant about seven months ago. It was performed April 5 2009. I had been cutting my hair all this time because I am in the military. but started to grow it out the last two weeks. but it still looks funny. What I mean by that is when it grows it doesn’t match the rest of the hair. the back hair is more full, and the front looks like stitches. Is this normal after seven months? How long do I have to let it grow to make it match the rest of my hair?
I do not know about your hair transplants or how the procedure was performed. I do not know what your expectations were or if you were given realistic expectations. So I really cannot comment on what you are experiencing. Keep in mind that not all hair transplant procedures are the same. The doctor and the team you chose can either produce great results or substandard results, depending upon their experience and skills. It is not like shopping for a car.
The best advice is to follow up with your doctor. Sometimes it can take a full year for 95% of the growth to be evident. At 7 months, I would expect 60-80% growth.
2009-10-14 12:34:162009-10-13 11:13:32I Had a Hair Transplant 7 Months Ago and It Still Doesn’t Grow Right
My question is in regards to the SMP (scalp micropigmentation) procedure. I’ve been taking propecia about four years now-started when I was 18. My hair has halted the balding process, but I cant tell it’s slowly creeping back up, which is what I expected anyways. I’m very interested in the SMP procedure, since scarring (even minimal) and a life-time commitment to propecia just isn’t for me. My questions are:
1) As opposed to hair transplant, how old does one have to be to become a good candidate for SMP?
2) If the procedure was done, would constantly shaving the head destroy the tattooed “hair”?
3) If after SMP, one would to stop propecia and lose their hair that was retained from the drug, would the loss of natural hair be noticeable even with SMP?
4) Lastly, are there any more recent photos you could share with us other than the ones already listed?Thanks
Any age above 18 years old will work for me if the patient understands the positive and negatives associated with the process. There’s a list of frequently asked questions at the SMP site.
Many people will shave the head every day or every other day. This is a personal preference. Shaving your head shouldn’t destroy the SMP.
If you stopped the Propecia, you would lose all benefits of the drug and the hair loss will play ‘catch up’ to what it would have been.
We only post the photos of patients that grant us permission, but we keep updating the SMP site with new photos all the time. Keep watch on it.
Taking finasteride seems to have little effect on recurrence in patients with alopecia who have undergone surgical treatment of gynecomastia. Surgeons may recommend continuous finasteride therapy in patients with alopecia who wish to take finasteride after the surgical treatment of gynecomastia.
2020-11-10 02:46:362020-11-10 06:30:33I had my Gynecomastia surgically treated, Can I now take finasteride?