The folks over at Medgadget.com are having their annual Medical Weblog Awards, and I’m very excited to announce that Balding Blog is up for the Best New Medical Weblog award!
Thank you very much for your support!
UPDATE: Voting is now over.
The folks over at Medgadget.com are having their annual Medical Weblog Awards, and I’m very excited to announce that Balding Blog is up for the Best New Medical Weblog award!
Thank you very much for your support!
UPDATE: Voting is now over.
Dear sir,
First of all i like to thank you you for helping the poor people who are feeling very sad over their hair loss. I am having continuous hair loss for the past 2 years. All of my hairs are becoming thinner and thinner day by day. i used all kinds of shampoo which don’t give me good results. i also have a dandruff problem. if i use oil it goes away, but comes back quickly after 2 or 3 days. please tell me what can i do for preventing more hair loss? please tell me not only which medication to use, but also tell me any useful shampoo which can give more help with medication. thank you.
It is not good medical practice to diagnose and make treatment recommendations without the ability to see and evaluate your problem. Your symptoms are very general, like asking an auto mechanic: “What is wrong with my car? It does not sound right!” A good mechanic likes to see what the problems are, and to be able to evaluate everything about your car.
For me, I need to examine your scalp, looking for genetic balding and other diseases like psoriasis (which sometimes looks like plain dandruff). Make an appointment with a good doctor and do not treat yourself, for your problem may be more difficult than you think.
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
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.
Dear dr. Rassman. Thank you for having time to answer questions concerning hair loss.
I am a black man. I had an FUE operation about 6 months ago. The donor area at the back of my head healed very well, but in the receiving area I got small pimples almost in every grafts incision (1000 grafts) in the front area of my head which looks different from the rest of the smooth skin. The hair is growing but it is not that dense to cover this area. These pimples are well seen especially from certain angles or according to the light reflection. I am really worried about if these skin changes will be permanent. What shall I do? Do you have any advice for me???
Pimples can be caused by sebum collections below the skin edge, but should have gone away within the first few months. FUE grafts should be trimmed, for if they are not trimmed and divided into their respective follicular unit, they will contain too much skin. The added skin will produce a skin deformity at the recipient site like the cobblestonning I talk much about in my published articles. The way light is reflected is an indication that too much skin may be have been left on the FUE graft or that the FUE graft was not separated into individual follicular units. Rarely, people with dark skin will tend to cause more scarring than those with very fair skin. Changes in the recipient area with a hair transplant do occur if you had atrophic skin (skin that lost much of the supportive infrastructure from blood vessels to glands, muscles and fat) or your hair is coarser, or if the surgical instrument used was large (by large I mean greater than 1mm, as a slit graft) or combinations of any of these factors. Today’s surgeons will use very small cutting instruments to minimize the skin wounds, hence the pitting or skin changes that could occur when the wounds are made too large. Skin deformities in the recipient area are rarely detected with small cutting instruments. Without seeing you directly, it would be hard to determine if any of these factors (or other factors) are playing a role here. I would expect that most people should not have this complaint, but just the other day I met a patient who had surgery from another medical practice with a similar complaint and I barely could see what was bothering him. This man had a body dysmorphic disorder. To determine your situation, either come in to my office (if you are in California) or at the least, send photos to the address on the Contact page.
Hi. I have a few questions for you that I hope you can help with.
First off, I have had multiple transplants so I would ask you not to insult me by sending me advertisement-type answers. I found you by Google searching so I don’t know much about you.
As I stated I have had multiple transplants. Dr. X and then Dr. Y were the two physicians I met with. Dr. Y’s scars from the donor area are rather large, Dr. X’s less so. But I did have a problem with one large graft falling out that essentially left a small ‘holish’ scar on my bald spot in the back of my head. Something I am not happy about but it is not that bad.
My hair is thin. It always has been. I am 39 years old now. I do not think I have much hair left to give from my donor areas without the back of my head starting to look bald too. I am right at the brink of what is acceptable re-distribution of the hair from the back of my head to the front of it.
It seems like you are strictly a hair transplant outfit but I thought I would ask for your opinion anyway. I do not think of myself with a full head of hair, I just want enough up front and even on the bald spot to have a stronger looking hairline overall. What would you recommend? Thank you for your time.
To address your question, you need to be evaluated directly. As you are local to Los Angeles, I ask you to please visit our open house on January 12 to meet some of the repair patients we have done. We have an open house event every month in our office if you can’t make this one. Read our repair articles published in respected medical journals, and get a private consultation to walk away educated with your options clearly defined. I will not insult you with propaganda and if you look at our website you will see that we are quite professional in the way we manage the medical hair restoration practice.
For more information about repairs, please read these articles:
I am a 42 y/o black female. My hair started thinning around the hairline about 2 years ago. At first I thought it was some of the chemicals being used by my hair stylist. I have changed to another stylist, but the problem persits. I recently went to a dermatologist who started me on Rogaine. However, the site for Rogaine states that it is for hairloss in the top of the scalp. Is there any treatments that will help thinning hair around the hairline? I understand that this is uncommon for women? Please help, this has effected me emotionally.
There are a few important issues to address in your question. The first thing to note is that all salons use similar chemicals so you might want to stop chemically treating your hair altogether for several months to see if it recovers. The second issue is whether or not you have a tight braid/ponytail type of hairstyle or have had recent facial plastic surgery (like a brow or a face lift) since both of these can result in the hairline thinning you describe. You are correct in that women rarely lose their hairline with female pattern/genetic hair loss, but it can happen and that is why you should be examined by a doctor who specializes in hair with an indepth assessment for miniaturization.
Finally, Rogaine has been studied best at the top of the scalp, but I have seen some hairline results in women so it is worth a try. Unfortunately for women, there are no medical alternatives for thinning hair other than Rogaine. It is also noteworthy that hairloss can profoundly affect a woman’s emotional health, much more so than with men although men suffer hairloss more commonly. I would urge you not only to proactively address the hair loss, but to take steps to treat the emotional impact it is having on you as well.
Hello, i am a 21 yr old male who has been noticing hair loss for about 3 years. It is becoming evident now more then ever. My hair line is reciding and thining on top. One thing i have noticed is when i look at the hairs that have fallen out of my head there is always a tiny white/light yellowish waxy ball attached to the bottom of it. I also notice them in my hair. What could it be? I have talked to my doc about propecia and will probally start that.
thank you very much!
That little ball at the end is either the bulb of the hair, a normal part of the hair that is often present when it falls out, or a tiny plug of sebum (waxy protective substance produced by the hair follicle) which is also normal.
By the way, contrary to popular belief, plugging of the hair follicles by sebum, oil, or other substances is not the cause of genetic/male pattern hair loss. Often people think this because when they start to lose hair they also start to see the shininess of their scalp which was previously covered. You will be addressing one of the main causes of hair loss (DHT attacking and weakening the hair) by taking Propecia so that is a good first step.
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I am 21 and had wavy hair that is receding and thinning on top and in back. I worry that if I get this transplant procedure done to early that it will not look right. I am not bald but yet but the recede bothers me. How do you cope with filling in thin areas where hair is still falling out around it.
First, you need a diagnosis with a good mapping of your scalp for miniaturization to find out for sure that you have genetic hair loss. You are correct that surgery is not the first stop along the path to deal with your hair loss, but probably the last. There are effective medications. Please get a diagnosis first, then a master plan on what to do next.
Dr. Rassman,
I am 21 years old and I have been losing my hair since I was 16. I am now a solid norwood II and I am getting to the point where my hairloss is a cosmetic issue. I started using propecia, but I experienced the side effect of gynocomastia which fortunately subsided when I stopped using the product. Unable to use propecia, I feel a hair system or a transplant are my only options. Am I a candidate for a transplant considering that my hairloss will have to be chased across my head with multiple and frequent transplants? Thanks for your site. It offers a much needed service.
There is a need to establish a good solid relationship with a good doctor for someone like you. Having tried Propecia and developed a side effect, clearly you are doing the right things. A good baseline for miniaturization needs to be mapped on your head. Both you and your doctor must be able to command just what is happening to you and project what might happen and when. With that relationship in hand, you will be in a better position to analyze your situation. I personally think that if you start off with a hair piece, you will absolutely accelerate the hair loss process. Again, get a good doctor and work with him/her before undergoing something as radical as a hair transplant at your age. With that said, anything is possible if it is well planned out with a good Master Plan for your future in hand.
How do you conclude that mastrubating will not effect hair fall (baldness). After that you body generates a lot of heat.. so i think even that may lead to baldness ?
Just a few days ago, I posted a blog entry on Masturbation and Hair Loss. We all sweat from jogging and exercise and yet that does not cause balding. You are misguided here, but as I said, don’t stop masturbating or having sex in the hope that hair loss will not occur. Masturbation and our sexuality is part of being a normal sexually active man and sex is one of the fruits of life.
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