Smelly Hair System

I have a hair system and it smells. I am compulsively clean and I used to wash my hair once or twice daily. Now, with the hair system on, I can not wash frequently. A close friend told me that the colognes I use do not help hide the smell, so when I heard this, I was devastated. Now I think that everyone is smelling me, my dates, the ladies around the office and strangers I meet, but I am so embarrassed that I do not know what to do. Any suggestions?

Just in case you weren’t sure, the term hair system is another term for a toupee, a wig or in local slang, a rug. Systems have been around for centuries. They have been found in Egyptian tombs, on frozen mummies from Alaska’s Eskimos, and on your late night TV showing quick fixes for hair loss. My saddest story reflects a less than ethical wig-salesmen (only some are bad folks), who introduced a 21 year old with early frontal balding for a free trial. Before he knew what was happening, his head was shaved and then a ‘mop’ was put on this poor soul’s head, glued to his shaved scalp. Of course, he could have walked out and not purchased one, but alas, with the front of his scalp shaved bald and the back of your head with long luxurious hair, he knew he was going to look kind of funny walking into the office in the morning. So, like a few fixes of Heroin, he got hooked on a ‘system’ and found it part of his persona for years. Worse still is the hidden reality that these systems promote hair loss from traction, accelerating the genetic hair loss and promoting the addiction even further. Hair piece cripples are created and they live their hell almost every day.

When a poor self image is perpetuated in the mirror every morning, the smell may be less of an issue. This emaiiler’s main point is the smell. To deal with the smell, the only satisfactory solution is to have a series of wigs, use clips to attach them so that they can be taken off at night and then wash the wig often. Daily washing of the scalp is not a problem when the wig is off the head. Washing the wig will cause it to wear out sooner and the result will be more frequent replacements. The use of clips are not promoted by those who sell these systems. For reasons I can not fully understand, glues and tapes are more popular, and weaves are gaining in popularity. These last three fastening methods keep the soap and water away from doing a proper cleaning of the scalp, despite what the wig salesmen say. If you can’t wash the scalp with the system off, the scalp will smell and if you do not wash the wig, it will smell. I have rarely seen a person in my office with a system that does not smell, but sometimes I can not tell if it is the system or the patient. Does it matter what smells?

Today, the cost of a hair system properly fitted and maintained in a 5 year period of time will often run more than the cost of a hair transplant procedure.

Are the small hairs in the front of my hairline new hairs?

Hairs in the frontal part of the hairline show slightly more vellus hairs which appear small and fine and this is what you may be looking at. Miniaturization throughout the head and scalp is less than 20% of the hair population, something I have published in medical journals. See Here: https://baldingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/pdf/mp-1997-evaluation.pdf

I have small bumps on my recipient area from a hair transplant 5 years ago (photo)

These bumps you are talking about appear like bits of elevated graft skin from the original transplant. These bumps occur when the surgeon leaves too much skin on the edge of the graft or does not flatten the graft to the skin surface at the time of the surgery.


2017-09-13 05:44:48I have small bumps on my recipient area from a hair transplant 5 years ago (photo)

Sleeping with Products in Hair

Does it hurt to sleep with Toppik and hair spray on your hair or should they be washed out each night?

I do not believe that sleeping with Toppik and hair spray would cause further hair loss. The Toppik will probably get on your pillows and make a mess if it comes off.


2006-02-03 08:46:50Sleeping with Products in Hair

Sleeping after crown hair transplant

i had a HT on my crown area. Last night i rolled much in my sleep and i saw i lost a lot of hair in my crown because of the rubbing against the pillow. Can you still damage the grafts at day 20th?

Use an airline pillow and put a pillow on both sides of you so you sleep on your back. Take a good dose of medication to put yourself to sleep. Keep this up for a week. If this happened at day 20, then there is nothing to worry about as the grafts are fully secure by this time.

Sleep Apnea, Milk Thistle, and Hair Loss

What a great web site you have here. I need your help. I’m 41 and have a good amount of hair. My hair is actually a little thinner on the sides and back then the top.(strange) I have been on Propecia with good results. My question is I sometimes wake up in the middle of the night with SEVERE scalp itch on the side and back of my head. I went to a derm and he told me to use Head and shoulders. That really hasn’t helped. I also have sleep apnea I think…(untreated right now). Can this cause hair loss? It is strange that my hair has seemed to thin in the donor area and not as bad on top.

As a side question I have elevated ALT liver test. I want to start taking Milk Thistle. Can this make hair loss worse or could it help? Thanks for all the great information on your site.

I highly doubt sleep apnea causes hair loss.

I’m pretty sure milk thistle will not cause you to lose hair, nor make existing hair loss any better. Milk thistle (also known as Mary thistle, holy thistle, or silymarin) is used by some to treat various liver ailments, but there’s no scientific proof to substantiate that. See National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine for more.

I don’t really know the status of your hair loss pattern other than what you describe. Perhaps you don’t have the typical male balding pattern? You mentioned thinning in the donor area (back of the head) — and this is not a typical balding pattern. I would express these concerns to your doctor who is treating your medical conditions. It seems you are trying to connect and associate everything with your hair.


2008-05-21 09:45:42Sleep Apnea, Milk Thistle, and Hair Loss

Sleep and Hair Loss

Does sleep (or lack of) have a big impact on hair and worsen MPB?

We know that people who do not get adequate sleep are stressed. Stressed people lose their hair (common in women) and accelerate hair loss that is part of the genetic male patterned baldness process.


2008-04-15 08:48:05Sleep and Hair Loss

Skin with hair grown from organoids

Dr. Rassman’s comment: Dr. Cotsarelis is one of the most well known regenerative medicine experts in the world so this summary should has great interest for the readers of this blog. I congratulate Dr. Cotsarelis and Dr. Wang for this very interesting research project.

Source: News & views

Hair-bearing skin grown in a dish, Authors: Leo L. Wang & George Cotsarelis
Undifferentiated human stem cells have been coaxed to develop into skin-like structures in vitro. When engrafted onto mice, the structures produce hair — highlighting the potential
of the approach for regenerative therapies

When hair follicles were first generated from stem cells that had been isolated from adult mouse skin1 , Jay Leno — a former host of US talk show The Tonight Show — joked that scientists “cured baldness … at least in mice”. Sixteen years on, the current host will have the opportunity to mention that scientists have ‘cured’ baldness in humans, now that Lee et al. 2 , writing in Nature, have regenerated hair follicles from human stem cells. This achievement places us closer to generating a limitless supply of hair follicles that can be transplanted to the scalps of people who have thinning or no hair. Moreover, if the approach reaches the clinic, individuals who have wounds, scars and genetic skin diseases will have access to revolutionary treatments. Research into skin-tissue engineering began in 1975, when a landmark study showed that cells called keratinocytes could be isolated from the surface layer of a person’s skin (the epidermis)3 , and the cell population expanded in culture. Almost a decade later, sheets of keratinocytes isolated from people with burns were transplanted back to the individuals they came from as life-saving, permanent engraftments4 . This work was the foundation for another remarkable achievement in 2017, when a boy who had a genetic disease called junctional epidermolysis bullosa (which causes severe fragility of the skin) had his epidermis replaced with genetically corrected cells5 . For this type of cell-based approach to advance further, grafted skin must include more of the components found in normal skin: hair follicles, pigment-producing melanocyte cells, sweat glands, nerves, muscle, fat and immune cells, in addition to epidermal cells. Enter Lee and colleagues. The authors leveraged research from the fields of stemcell biology and hair-follicle development6 to generate near-complete skin organoids — self-organizing tissues grown in the laboratory that mimic developing skin. Organoids have been grown to imitate various organs, including the gut, lung, kidney and brain7 . Because organs consist of many cell types, organoids are typically formed from pluripotent stem cells, which have the ability to form all adult cell types. These can be embryonic stem cells or induced pluripotent stem cells, which are created by reprogramming adult cells to an embryonic-like state8 . The epidermis and the dermis — the skin’s other main component — are derived from different cell types in the early embryo. Lee et al. optimized the culture conditions needed to generate skin organoids containing both components from human pluripotent stem cells. The authors sequentially added growth factors to the stem cells. First, they used BMP4 and an inhibitor of the transcription factor TGF-? to induce formation of the epidermis. Next, they treated the cells with the growth factor FGF2 and an inhibitor of BMP, to induce the formation of cranial neural crest cells, which give rise to the dermis. The cells grew in a sphere. After more than 70 days, follicles began to appear, which ultimately produced hair (Fig. 1). Most hairs were pigmented by melanocytes, which also develop from the cranial neural crest. Tissues associated with hair follicles — such as sebaceous glands, nerves and their receptors, muscles and fat — developed, too, leading to the formation of remarkably complete skin in a dish9 . One missing component, however, was immune cells, which normally reside in and around hair follicles, and have diverse roles in the skin10. Lee and colleagues found that their organoids expressed genes that were characteristic of skin from the chin, cheek and ear. Interestingly, dermal cells on the scalp might also derive from the neural crest11. This suggests that the organoids might actually mimic scalp skin, and also highlights that it could be possible to tailor the authors’ protocol to generate skin that has the characteristics of Regenerative medicine Hair-bearing skin grown in a dish Leo L. Wang & George Cotsarelis Undifferentiated human stem cells have been coaxed to develop into skin-like structures in vitro. When engrafted onto mice, the structures produce hair — highlighting the potential of the approach for regenerative therapies. Pluripotent stem cells Epidermal layer Dermal layer Fat-cell layer Organoid Latent period Transplant Epidermal differentiation using BMP4 and TGF-? inhibitor Dermal differentiation using FGF2 and BMP4 inhibitor Baldness Wound healing Genetic skin disorders Hair follicle Figure 1 | Skin grown in vitro as a future clinical therapy. Lee et al. 2 grew human pluripotent stem cells (which can give rise to all cell types) into spherical skin-like structures called organoids in vitro. To achieve this, they treated the cells with growth factors (BMP4 and a TGF-? inhibitor) that promote growth of the skin’s epidermal layer and then with other growth factors (FGF2 and a BMP4 inhibitor) that induce formation of the dermal layer (a fat-cell layer also forms at this stage). After a long latent period (more than 70 days), the full complement of skin cells formed in the organoid, including around 50 hair follicles. When the organoids are implanted into skin, the hair follicles naturally orient themselves in the correct direction. It is possible that these organoids could be used to treat baldness and genetic skin disorders, and to promote wound healing. Nature | 1 News & views https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-020-01568-2 © 2 0 2 0 S p ri n g e r N a t u r e Li mi t e d. Al l ri g h t s r e s e r v e d. different body sites, by altering the culture conditions in which the cells are grown. The group’s organoids will be a perfect tool for analyzing the roles of various biological pathways in skin development — small-molecule inhibitors or inhibitory RNA molecules can be used to block proteins or pathways and to investigate the effects on skin growth. The organoids can be used in combination with genome-wide association studies or other genetic data to analyze how particular genetic mutations alter skin development. They can also help to model diseases of the skin and hair and to screen experimental drugs for any toxicities and for their efficacy. Beyond these in vitro benefits, the authors demonstrated that the organoids have therapeutic potential in vivo. They transplanted the organoids onto immunodeficient mice (to ensure the graft was not rejected by the animals’ immune system), and showed that just over half of organoids go on to form hair, which is distributed over the surface of the graft. This illustrates the exciting potential of introducing skin organoids into wounds to encourage healing and prevent scarring, or transplanting them into areas lacking hair. However, several questions remain before this therapeutic approach becomes a reality. For instance, how efficiently and reproducibly do hairs develop? How many cells are needed to eventually form a hair follicle once grafted? Lee et al. began to answer the first of these questions by showing that a separate laboratory could grow hair in organoids using the same culture conditions. However, dealing with variability between individual stem cells and between the stem cells from different people are daunting challenges. The prolonged length of time required for organoids to develop hair follicles mimics fetal skin development12. Similarly, in both settings, the skin undergoes a latent ‘resting’ phase before follicles begin to grow. This is a fascinating area for future study. However, it took 140 days before organoids were ready for engraftment, which could impede the therapeutic potential of the work — someone with burns, for instance, cannot wait that long for a skin graft. Further studies to understand the molecular events taking place during this latent phase should provide strategies for accelerating this process using molecules that alter relevant signaling pathways. Several other aspects of the authors’ approach will also need to be optimized before it can move to the clinic. The hairs that grew in the current study were small; in future, further optimization of culture conditions will be needed to form large scalp hairs. Better characterization of some components used in the culture cocktail — such as a protein mixture called Matrigel — will be necessary to ensure that they comply with good manufacturing practices. And future work might need to move away from using pluripotent stem cells, which can have undesirable side effects, such as promoting tumor formation. An appealing alternative might be to use adult stem cells. Despite these caveats, Lee and colleagues’ study is a major step towards a ‘cure’ for baldness in humans, and paves a way towards other, greater therapeutic possibilities. At a minimum, it is worth a shout-out on a late-night show. The work holds great promise of clinical translation — we are confident that research will eventually see this promise realized. Leo L. Wang and George Cotsarelis are in the Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA. e-mails: leo.wang@pennmedicine.upenn.edu; cotsarel@pennmedicine.upenn.edu 1. Morris, R. J. et al. Nature Biotechnol. 22, 411–417 (2004). 2. Lee, J. et al. Nature https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020- 2352-3 (2020). 3. Rheinwald, J. G. & Green, H. Cell 6, 331–343 (1975). 4. Gallico, G. G. III, O’Connor, N. E., Compton, C. C., Kehinde, O. & Green, H. N. Engl. J. Med. 311, 448–451 (1984). 5. Hirsch, T. et al. Nature 551, 327–332 (2017). 6. Saxena, N., Mok, K.-W. & Rendl, M. Exp. Dermatol. 28, 332–344 (2019). 7. Rossi, G., Manfrin, A. & Lutolf, M. P. Nature Rev. Genet. 19, 671–687 (2018). 8. Takahashi, K. & Yamanaka, S. Cell 126, 663–676 (2006). 9. Plikus, M. V. et al. Science 355, 748–752 (2017). 10. Kobayashi, T. et al. Cell 176, 982–997 (2019). 11. Ziller, C. in Hair Research for the Next Millenium: Proc. 1st Tricont. Meet. Hair Res. Socs (eds Randall, V. A. et al.) 19–23 (Elsevier, 1996). 12. Pinkus, H. in The Biology of Hair Growth (eds Montagna, W. & Ellis, R. A.) 1–32 (Academic, 1958)


2020-06-06 14:46:35Skin with hair grown from organoids

Skin Changed Color After Moustache Transplant

i had 900 grafts trasplant on moustache and goatee area !!! after 2 weeks when i shaved my skin turned pink and orange and darker on the side !!!! is it a common thing ? how long it will last before it fades away and i also have a lot of pimple on my chin!! the fact that i shaved afeter to weeks is gonna affect the grafts…….thanx doctor

You should address these issues with the doctor who did your surgery. A good patient/doctor relationship is critical in achieving a desired goal. I would be concerned about things like pimples, because early folliculitis can behave that way. Two weeks after a hair transplant your skin may still be healing and it is sometimes normal to have some discoloration (especially after shaving, which causes irritation even more). The degree of discoloration should be something judged by your doctor so that you know if it is beyond what he expected.


2006-08-10 15:18:08Skin Changed Color After Moustache Transplant

Skin cells, graying, balding and a cure for hair loss – A relationship is defined

“Although this project was started in an effort to understand how certain kinds of tumors form, we ended up learning why hair turns gray and discovering the identity of the cell that directly gives rise to hair,” said Lu Q. Le, MD, PhD, associate professor of dermatology with the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, UT Southwestern. “With this knowledge, we hope in the future to create a topical compound or to safely deliver the necessary gene to hair follicles to correct these cosmetic problems.”

There is a long path to this discovery and an actual drug. The full article is here: https://www.mdlinx.com/dermatology/article/861?utm_source=in-house&utm_medium=message&utm_campaign=in-the-news-may17-derm