The Medical Science of Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

What constitutes a good way to follow genetic balding? So far it seems to be a vague art that varies between doctors, and not something that will give an intelligent person an understanding of what is happening to them.

Block Quote

Miniaturization occurs in men and women who are balding. Miniaturization is the process where a normal thickness hair shaft becomes thinner and thinner over time due to the genetically determined effects of aging and/or androgenic hormones on the terminal (normal) hair follicle. The process of miniaturization is a slow process in genetic balding. Hair shafts may lose 10% of their diameter, then 20%, then 30% and so on. Each degree of increased miniaturization reflects further progression of the genetic balding process. The instruments that measure miniaturization were invented (and patented) by me in the early 1990s and they are in wide spread use today. Socially detectable hair loss is not evident until more than 60% of the hair has been lost and as a result, many men do not seek out expert help until they see some evidence of balding (which they too often deny).

When a doctor views the scalp hair with high magnification, the degree of miniaturization and the location of the miniaturization are both critical to establishing (1) the diagnosis and (2) the rate of the process, which progresses over time. Because miniaturization is a relative measurement at any one time (comparing finer hair to the thickest hair), it takes substantial experience before this measurement can be useful to the individual clinician. In our experience, from examining and following thousands of patients with the Hair Densitometer, we have found that assessing the degree of miniaturization has useful predictive value when evaluating the risks of hair loss and in establishing hair loss patterns. The amount of miniaturization in each section of the scalp tells the physician just how far the balding is progressing or has progressed. In men who show more and more areas of miniaturization over time, the genetic balding can be considered active.

A high degree of miniaturization in the upper portion of the fringe area in a Norwood Class 6 pattern (see below in red) suggests that the donor fringe will lower over time so a person who may be a Class 6 pattern balding pattern may become a Class 7 pattern, reducing the fring around the sides and back to a 3 1/3 inch band. A high degree of miniaturization throughout the donor area indicates that all of the patient’s hair may be unstable for hair transplantation and that he may be at risk to have diffuse unpatterned alopecia with extensive balding, even on the sides and in the back of the head (an area normally not affected by any balding or miniaturization in most men). The unpatterned alopecia is characteristic of women’s genetic balding pattern which is often found all over the head including the back and sides.

Miniaturization in the recipient area (front, top and crown) can often delineate which areas of the scalp are most likely to bald and which are stable, anticipating the patient’s future Norwood hair loss classification. If a man has 90% miniaturization in the crown (back of the head) and only 30% in the mid scalp, the physician may assume that the crown is at a higher risk of earlier hair loss than the mid-scalp, giving him an eventual Class 4 or 5 balding pattern.

We feel that in predicting the short-term loss, the extent of miniaturization in the recipient area, as well as the rapidity of the loss, is critical in establishing the guidelines for treatment, whether it is a hair transplant or drug intervention. In the very early stages of hair loss (the many in his early-mid twenties), increased miniaturization can anticipate future balding even before any loss can be seen to the naked eye. Often the reason a person seeks a consultation for hair restoration expert is that there is some change in the “rate” of his hair loss (often more hair seen on the pillow or in the shower). A patient who is very gradually losing his hair is less likely to seek help than a patient who suddenly has acceleration in the rate that he is losing hair. Usually large numbers of hairs undergo miniaturization before any are actually lost and the time the drugs are most effective is in this early phase. In men, DHT is the hormone responsible for these changes.

For the most reliable prediction of the final hair loss pattern, the patient should be over the age of 25 (above 30 is better) and have some visual evidence that the process has started. A base measurement and subsequent follow up measurements are essential to the proper management of hair loss by any doctor considered to be an expert in the field. By understanding these measurements over time, the doctor will understand just what this all means and better yet, the patient now has a way to follow what is happening to him/her. Many young men worry about following their father’s or mother’s male family balding history and come to the office to find out what their future has in store for them. The microscopic assessment for miniaturization is the best way to determine this.

With successful medical (drug) treatments like Propecia in men, the miniaturization may be reversed (partly or completely). The responsiveness of each patient is different, so each patient must be diligent in follow up measurements of the degree of miniaturization and the location of the miniaturization by scalp location. The same diagnostic criteria should and must be followed in women. Without good measurements for miniaturization, there is no clinical science in the treatment of hair loss, just hocus-pocus and blustering, a problem that is far too frequent today.

High Forehead in Young Man – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Dr Rassman,
I’m a 26 year old male who has experienced some frontal hair loss for the past 3 years. I used to where my hair slicked back in high school and some time after, but I noticed my forehead increased in length and I started to get a higher hairline. I guess being of English/French descent, I would have to deal with this soon enough. I never slicked my hair back ever again,because my forehead is just too long. I leave my hair natural and lay it foreward, but i have to have bangs just to keep the attention away from my forehead. It helps, but i don’t care to have long bangs. It sometimes makes my forehead breakout. I wish I had alot of money so I can take care of this, but i live on $8.00 per hour in the Bush era. Plus I need LASIK eye surgery because I look a lot better without glasses. My eyes are the only decent thing about me. The rest of me is 6’1 1/2″ of high foreheaded European human waste. Looks are almost number 1 on the priority list for me, but its difficult when u don’t have successful genes to help u in the long run.

Block Quote

I do not want to rub your financial predicament with more salt to the wound of $8/hour wages. Sometimes, you have to figure a less expensive way out. The least expensive way for you is:

  1. Start taking Propecia to reduce the loss further. This will run you between $55-80/month, something you probably can afford to do.
  2. Change your combing style (forward to hide the long forehead). This will cost you a good 10 cents for a comb.

Be creative, and when your time comes for a hair transplant, reach out to us for our Standby Program where our prices are lower and more affordable for those that are more flexible with their schedule.

Hair Loss InformationMarketing and Ethics – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

On October 31, 2005 you wrote a piece and appeared to criticize the marketing of some of the companies that you mentioned. You are high and mighty with your condemnation of these companies, yet you did the same thing by calling your company NEW Hair. Why are you any different than they are?

Block Quote

You are referring to my blog entry, Recapeen, FUE Plus & Lasers for Hair Loss?, in which I discuss the word “NEW” used in advertising. I may not like the tone of your question, but I relish tackling the answer. Marketing is not a bad word. The business community looks at marketing as the sum of product research (or service research), development of products and process, public education and advertising, and sales. The scope of what falls into marketing reflects the value of a product or service as it impacts the consumer.

You seem to be angry about my exploitation of the word NEW in our market branding for a hair transplant medical group. Well, putting aside the clever exploitation of a proven adjective in marketing, sales, and promotion of our service, I believe that the term NEW is appropriate for our business and the massive publications that led the world of hair restoration. I would direct you to the Medical Publications page on the New Hair Institute website, where we have posted the papers that originated much of what was NEW in hair transplant standards and now have become the standard of care today. Few terms would be more appropriate for our many contributions in this industry. We even pioneered an outspoken position on medical ethics, which was not a popular position to be in at the time. Please read Comparitive Shopping for Hair Restoration, Doctor Availability, and Low Laser Light Therapy, which I feel are all relevant to my answer.

Straighteners Causing Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi, I wonder if you could help me, I am 28 years old and I have always had slight thinning in the temple areas of my scalp. I have always been able to hide this with a fringe etc but since I have been using hair straightners I can’t put my hair up in a pony tail as you can see the thinning more and I have started to receed. Could this be because of using straightners that it has become worse or could there be an underlying cause. Both my parents have full head of hair and hair thinning doesn’t run in the family.

Block Quote

Without seeing a photo of you it is tough to tell, but given your age and the circumstances you describe, I suspect you have some degree of traction alopecia, which is hair loss caused by pulling at the root. This is commonly caused by tight braiding, ponytails, etc., and as you can imagine it is more common in women. Any mechanism that pulls excessively at the hair may cause this (even clip-on or glue-in hair pieces) and over time if the hair continues to be pulled, it can become permanent. You also mentioned that you have begun straightening your hair. Sometimes, the chemicals in hair treatments can damage the hair and cause loss. In addition to that, though, when you straightened your hair, the problem worsened since straight hair covers less area than curly or wavy hair does. Pulling your hair back into a ponytail not only pulls at the hair at the temples, it would also expose the areas that already have loss making it look worse. Without examining you I cannot tell how much of your hair loss is due to chemicals or to traction, but loss at the temples is a hallmark of traction alopecia all by itself. Neither of these is genetic by the way.

What I would suggest is that you stop using any styling that would cause excessive pulling (i.e. traction) on your hair and also stop using straighteners for at least 6 months to give the hair a chance to grow back. If your hair does not grow back in a year, you may be a candidate for hair transplant in those areas.

Psoriasis and Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi,

I have male pattern baldness. it started at age 18 from my temples and has been receding terribly over the years, and more esp over the last 5 years. I am now 43. I used to have severe psoraisis on the face and scalp and was told the hair loss was because of that. Now the psoraisis has gone down considerably, alomost completely but the receding continues. i also have thick scabs on my scalp on and off that do not look like psoraisis scabs, i think it could be symptomatic of systemic yeast/eczema?

I used to have a very thick full head of hair, more than the average person so the hair loss over the years was more apparent to me than to others. Now, it is apparent to everyone. i just have a strand or two to cover my unnaturally high forehead, the hair on top is very thin, weak and sparse, there is more at the back but that too has recently thinned a lot.

In the last 3-4 months, my hair has been falling out in clumps, and is extremely coarse, dry and brittle. Please dont tell me it is age because this has been happening throughtout my adult life , but has has gotten much worse recently and esp since my first ever perm a year ago. But the frontal hair has been receding steadily since age 18. It has been very distressing and depressing for me, and nowadays, i dont even like to look in the mirror and see my unkempt hair. No matter what i do – hair oils, etc, it is as dry n weak as ever and receding all the time. help would be very welcome and appreciated.

This is an area where I have first hand knowledge, with the worst form of scalp psoriasis one can have. Mine, like yours, burned out in the scalp and I have almost none of if at this time. But I never lost hair because I was careful about not pulling off the plaques which would have almost certainly produced traction alopecia. Psoriasis does not cause hair loss unless the plaques are pulled off and the hair comes out with the plaques regularly.

With regard to hair transplants, I am frequently asked by people with psoriasis, if the psoriasis can be moved from one part of the scalp to another. In my experience, psoriasis can not be transplanted from the affected area to an unaffeced area, but any surgery done on active psoriasis, can make it worse, unless it is treated topically prior to the surgery.

You may have a skin condition and this must be defined by a good dermatologist. The rest of your needs are easily dealt with through traditional hair transplantation, which is extensively discussed in my book, The Patient’s Guide to Hair Restoration.

Fear of Propecia’s Side Effects – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

hi doctor,
Iam 22 years old male and my hair has been thinning for about 3 years. I took many medications especially vitamins ( biotine B5, zinc, Durance, Nutri-cap,……….), only the zinc had reduced the hair loss but not the thinning. I used minoxidil 5% but I had an excessive dandruff on my scalp ( even Nizoral didnt eliminate it. I didnt try proprcia since to its sexual sideeffects and others bad feedbacks about sexual disfunctions ( btw my friend had a bad reduction in his libdo and a raise in testesterone)….. Any advice please professor to any alternatives to stop my hair thinning.
Thanks and I appareciate your effort…

Just because your friend had a decreased libido with Propecia, does not mean that you will. If you try it and you don’t like it, you can stop it at any time and the problem will correct in a week or so. It is the BEST approach to hair loss in a young man, and there are no other proven therapies that work as well on young men. Alternatively, you can become bald, but then it you do, transplantation will be your only recourse.

Try it; you might find that Propecia is not a bad experience at all. Very few of my patients tell me that they feel anything at all on the drug. Some reported an increased sex drive. Men are highly suggestive, so if you truly believe that Propecia will reduce your libido, then it might do just that.

Doctor Refusing to Prescribe Finasteride – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am a 23 year old guy. I have been using minoxidil solution for past 6 months. I keep my hair short coz i feel my roots will have to bear lesser weight. Minoxidil 5% once a day was helping me for 5 months, then suddenly since in the past month my hair has become rough and has started falling out again. One of the dermatologist says that you should use minoxidil for 3 months… then stop usage for 1 month… then again use for 3 months… then again stop for 1 month. Does this sound ok to you?

He is not allowing me to use Finasteride 1 mg, because he says it can give impotency problems. And I’ve been losing hair from sidelocks too. I never knew this happened in male pattern baldness.

My dad is bald. He became bald at 28 due to side effects of medicines, but he always had thinning hair. My mothers side… all have thick hair, but on my dad’s side, although people are not bald, they have very thin hair (and many have cancerous disease on my dads side). My doctor still maintains I have male pattern baldness. Is there a way to test if this is male pattern baldness or something else?

Block Quote

I am having problems with your dermatologist’s opinions. All doctors have a right to a medical opinion, but I am going to take a contrary view to his recommendation, because what he is telling you is not supported in the literature. Finasteride (Propecia) has to be the best hair loss medication for a young man (read the many blog questions and answers on this very subject). The decreased libido sexual side-effect is relatively rare (less than 2%) and if it were to happen, you could stop the drug and the problem would be gone in a matter of days. I strongly disagree with his opinion on Minoxidil and Finasteride.

The diagnosis of male patterned genetic balding is easily made with a densitometer (magnifying instrument used on the scalp) which will show the miniaturization of hair in the balding areas affected by the ‘defective’ genes. Diagnosis is first and foremost in your overall MASTER plan for your hair loss. A good doctor needs to perform this test and then outline the plan with you.

Your Rights as a Patient – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

[Note: Due to the amount of emailed questions that come in daily, I’ve asked fellow New Hair Institute physician Dr. Sara Wasserbauer to assist me. All questions that she answers are clearly identified as such.]

 

I thought I purchased a hair transplant session and paid for 3000 grafts. I counted the hairs on my head (now one year later) and I do not believe that there is 500 new hairs there, and that is a generous quess. What might have happened? Could I have gotten 3000 grafts and they failed to grow, or was I cheated, sold one thing and received something else? How do I tell the difference and what are my options if I were cheated? Are their ethical standards amongst the doctors?

Since I can’t see you to tell for myself (email and digital photos are no substitute for real life in a case like this), there are several things which you might consider;

  1. Check the photos: The first thing you should do is to follow up with the surgeon who did your transplant. These are good questions to ask your surgeon and he should respond with a sincere concern and answers that appear targeted to your questions. Visiting with your doctor to compare your pre-operative photographs with your current hair growth can sometimes be an eye-opening experience. If your doctor’s office is equipped with a 50 power video microscope, you can often use that to help see the grafts next to the native hair (although if follicular units were transplanted it can be difficult to tell the difference in certain cases).
  2. Be patient: Realize that sometimes growth can take up to 18 months. Most hair docs quote a year as the time period to have the final results (90% of the growth in) but it can take longer. I would want to know more about your post-operative course. Did you have difficulty healing? Are there other medical problems or skin conditions which you have that might delay growth?
  3. Inquire at the source: When you speak with your surgeon, ask how the surgery went! If there is a problem with growth, most ethical doctors will not only back up their work but also want to know about it so they can pinpoint potential problems and make things right.

Lastly, there ARE ethical standards in the industry, such as those set by the ISHRS, in addition to those which encompass all of medicine. If you suspect a problem with your results, your first option for recourse is to deal directly with the doctor who did the work. Before you jump in to a legal battle, be sure to know where your previous doctor is coming from, then write back to us here and we can write the next chapter for you.

By Drs. Sara Wasserbauer William Rassman

Proscar or Propecia? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Dr. Rassman,

I’ve just started using Propecia, and Minoxidil 12.5%, but have seen that Proscar has much more of the active ingredient for the same price. Would you recommend Proscar, and how come if it’s so much stronger, and better value for money, it’s not as popular?! Also I read about one of the active ingredients in Minoxidil burning the scalp Is this true? If I’m using Proscar which is 5 times the strength of Propecia, do I need to worry about minoxidil at all? I don’t really like having to apply the cream every night anyway! I do appreciate your time, & look forward to your reply!

Proscar is the 5mg version of Finasteride and Propecia is the 1mg version of the same drug. They do cost about the same and both require a doctor’s prescription. Many people buy the 5mg dose and then split it up. That is not very convenient, but there is no medical reason for me to tell you not to do it. The drug company’s studies show that for hair loss, the 5mg dose is just as effective as the 1mg dose, but the side effects go up as the dosage rises. So if you elect to take Proscar, be sure to use a pill cutter to reduce the dose so that you do not increase the possible side effects of the drug.

Minoxidil does have skin irritation as a side effect, but if you do not experience skin irritation of more flaking(or some of the other side effects), then you can continue using it. The old saying applies: Try it, you might like it!

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):


Celebrating 500 Posts! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I just wanted to take a moment to thank all of the readers of this site, especially those that have written in with questions and comments. This site was launched in April, 2005 with the simple goals of answering hair loss questions and educating people about hair restoration- and while the blog has achieved great success in helping people, the growth it has received in just over 6 months is beyond what I had imagined.

A few new things worth pointing out:

  1. Upgraded search. Now that there are over 500 posts here, finding what you want in the search could get a little tiresome. The updated search feature (in the top right of every page on this site) allows you to find what you’re looking for much faster than before. If you haven’t used the search feature before, I’d recommend that you give it a try, so that you can find the answers to your hair loss questions. If you HAVE used the search before, I hope that you find that the changes are for the better.
  2. RSS feeds. Syndicated news feeds are a great way to get the latest headlines from BaldingBlog, without actually having to visit the site multiple times a day. Yahoo, MSN, Google, and many other sites are supporting these RSS news feeds, and it is definitely a great way to keep up to date. To find out more about RSS, please read here for a brief tutorial. It really is far easier than it may sound. In fact, there are links on the right column of this site (under “Syndication”) to make it easy to add BaldingBlog to your My Yahoo or My MSN pages.
  3. Subscribe to comments. Now when you make a comment to a page, there is a checkbox to give you the option to subscribe to the comments. When someone posts another comment in that same blog entry, you will be notified via email. Please remember, the comment form under each blog posting should be used for discussing that individual blog entry. Unique questions should still be sent by using the Contact page, of which I usually will send you an email when your question is answered on the site.

I sincerely hope you’ve enjoyed the site thus far, and please remember that this site is updated every weekday with more hair loss questions and answers. If you’ve sent me a question that hasn’t appeared on this site yet, it will be posted as soon as possible. I’d love your feedback on potential new feature ideas for this site, or your thoughts on things that can be improved upon.

Once again, thank you for visiting.