Hair Loss from Zoloft, Surmontil, Xanax, or Temesta?

Dear Dr. Rassman

I am 33 and suffered from depression and anxiety attacks over a period of years and took numerous antidepressants including Zoloft and Surmontil. In addition I took sedatives such as Xanax and Temesta. During that time I did not notice any hairloss, even though I experienced a huge amount of stress. I am on the way to recovery now and stopped taking the antidepressants over 6 months ago and am weaning myself off the Xanax. For the last 6 months I have been experiencing mild hair loss, especially noticeable on the front hairline. Gaps are appearing in the hairline, which was normally full. I wash my hair about 4 times a week and comb my hair when washing it. In total I notice about 20-30 hairs on my hands and comb every time, which I never did before. I have no family history on either side of baldness. I have the following questions:

1) Is it possible that I could be experience temporary hair loss as a result of a history of using antidepressants and huge stress, and am having something of a delayed reaction? If so when can I expect hair to start growing back, if at all?

2) Does hair generally become thinner and recede in any case with age?

3) How can the loss of 50-100 hairs a day be normal? It seems like such a huge amount. Even given that new hairs are growing, that is around 30,000 hairs a year.

Thanks for any advice.

Kind Regards

Stress and antidepressent medications can cause hair loss. In some people, the hair shafts become finer (rather than coarser) and develop less densities of the hairs themselves with age. Most people lose about 100 hairs per day and they grow back about the same number of hairs each day.

Hair Loss from Wigs

Hi,

I am a 52 year old African American female, who has had the struggle of being bald most of my life. When I was 12 I had a severe case of chicken pox, and left me scarred all over. Fortunately, I recoved with the skin, but the disease left large bald spots all over my scalp. I have worn wigs .. seems like forever.

The problem is no one has ever been able to help me through the years, and the wigs that I always wore, are taking out the remaining hair I have left on my head.

Is there someone I can see, to help me with this problem. I have used medications, hair weaves, etc to no avail.

Thanks

Wearing a wig for many years can cause further hair loss as a result of the traction caused by the wigs. Traction Alopecia is common in wig wearers, those who wear turbins, and even in those women who pulled their hair into tight pony tails. Send your photos or if you are planning a trip to Los Angeles, visit my office so that I could better evaluate your situation. There are a few questions I need to answer, but can’t do so until I can see your hair loss. These questions include: What is your donor supply like? Is there enough hair for redistribution with hair transplants?


2006-01-18 07:08:44Hair Loss from Wigs

Hair Loss from Weight Loss

In a recent news article from Central Florida’s Local 6 News, the relationship between hair loss and dieting was emphasized. Although I have always included weight loss as a contributing factor in hair loss, I was reminded by this article of the obesity problem that is confronting the American population and the degree to which people are willing to go to lose excess pounds. Sometimes, starvation diets are employed and are just not a subject that anyone wants to talk about (short of bulimia in a movie staff), but the problem is real and weight loss can accentuate any hair loss that may be present, if not precipitating its onset if it is not present but within the genetic cards of that person. For more info, see the article link here.


2005-11-16 16:58:53Hair Loss from Weight Loss

Hair loss from weight loss, will it come back?

Probably yes, assuming that the hair is not those hairs with the genes for hair loss. Sometimes rapid weight loss accelerates the genetic patterns you inherit


2021-04-26 08:22:09Hair loss from weight loss, will it come back?

Hair Loss from Weight Lifting?

Dear Dr. Rassman,

I am a 24 year old male medical student. I have had a very gradually receding hairline for the past 2-3, but just recently (past 6-8 months) I noticed the shedding of hair has increased and my hair is thinning in the front. This realization really is depressing because I didn’ think I would start REALLY balding until I was well in my 30s. At least thats been the pattern in my immediate family. I have an appointment with the dermatologist in a month to pinpoint it to male pattern baldness and not something else just to make sure. Anyways, my question to you is whether or not there is a correlation between weight lifting and hairloss?

Working out, especially with heavy weights, will increase your testosterone levels. So the natural assumption would be that increased testosterone levels = increased DHT production = more hair loss. I personally have been a big fan of whey protein supplements, glutamine, and creatine to boost my gains in the gym. My parents always warned me against taking these saying it was “unnatural” and would have consequences in the long run, and now I’m wondering if they might have been right after all. I’ve had a protein shake(30 grams whey protein) and maybe 5 grams of glutamine maybe 3-5 times a week for the past 4-5 years. This is very coincident with the time that my hairline started to gradually recede.

I’m starting to wonder now whether my dedication to weight training and diet actually hastened the hair loss process. For now, I am discontinuing all forms of supplements including protein drinks and glutamine. Doing this will obviously cut my gains in the gym, but as long as I can save my hair for now I don’t care what it takes. What is your opinion on this???

What you are suggesting is logical, but there is no proof to it. Since you are 24 years old and at the peak of the early balding process when genetics generally tend to kick in, it may be coincidental with your training process. Realistically, if you have genetic hair loss you should have a diagnosis made, then probably treat it with Propecia, which should stop the hair loss impact of DHT reasonably well. As a medical student you should approach this process the correct way.

Hair Loss from Tuberculosis?

My 17 years old daughter was diagnosed with inactive tuberculosis about 8 months ago and has been taking INH. However, about 18 months ago she started losing her hair. Could this be caused by the tuberculosis alone?

I have written on this medication with tuberculosis before (see Tuberculosis Drug and Hair Loss). The disease itself is a wasting disorder which is known to produce hair loss, as with other wasting disorders. The same recommendations I made before apply: good diet and appropriate vitamin therapy. A full work-up for female hair loss is in order here as there are many diseases that cause hair loss in women (see Female Hair Loss category). Read these pages carefully and seek out a good doctor to follow through with a thorough examination of your daughter. Also, you might want her to see a hair specialist who will study her for female genetic hair loss and assess the miniaturization of her hair to see if the pattern is typical of female genetic hair loss.


2006-01-05 10:24:30Hair Loss from Tuberculosis?

Hair Loss from Testosterone Replacement Therapy?

Dear Dr. Rassman,

I have been under the care of an anti-aging doctor for two years. I have been taking testosterone (TRT). I have had hair transplants 10 years ago. I have been recently experiencing
more hair in my comb. Can Testosterone replacement cause transplanted hair to be lost?

Testosterone replacement may cause androgenic alopecia, but it should not cause hair loss in the permanent hair that was transplanted from the back and sides of your head (these hairs are not affected by DHT). You may be experiencing hair loss from your native non-transplanted hair.


2007-09-24 10:36:16Hair Loss from Testosterone Replacement Therapy?

Hair Loss from Straightener?

(female) Can you permanently lose some of your hair if you straighten your hair too much with a straightener? If so, is there a home remedy or a cheap way to grow it all back?

You can permanently damage the hair with chemicals and it is not uncommon when people continuously straighten their hair and experiment with the chemicals used for this. The 2nd part of your question is a little ridiculous to me — if there was really a magic formula to grow back all of your hair (and cheap, too), I highly doubt we’d see half of the population with some form of hair loss. In other words, no.


2007-10-10 11:32:08Hair Loss from Straightener?

Hair Loss From Stopping Minoxidil

No question this time, but I wanted to share a quick story…

A 58 year old patient of ours was transplanted in the corners of his frontal hairline. He had used minoxidil for years with what he thought was no effect. After his corners were transplanted, he stopped the minoxidil and in time, lost hair behind the transplanted corner on his right side. In hindsight, this complication could have been avoided had he gone back on the minoxidil, but neither he nor I realized the dependence of the minoxidil over the previous years.

As a rule, men in his age range do not suffer from shock hair loss (very, very rare), but in this case, minoxidil was far more effective than we thought. He is now only 2 months post surgery and was immediately restarted on the minoxidil. I am hopeful that the drug will regrow the hair he lost behind the transplants on his right side, but only time will tell us. The lesson here is that when you are a long term user of minoxidil, you really do need to stay on the drug for life.

Hair Loss from Steroid Use

Your office is not that far from the famous Muscle Beach. Do you get many of the hardcore bodybuilders in for hair transplants? And taking all of those steroids…wouldn’t it be courter productive or should I say maybe a waste of time to get the hair transplant for those prone to baldness anyway or do they just take of more and different drugs of the estrogen blocking nature?
The reason I ask is that when I was in my younger days when I first really started loosing my hair( after two knee surgeries by the way???)I started weight lifting/bodybuilding to conpensate for my emotions concerning my hair loss, I had a rough time dealing with it. So I was tempted to take them (back when they were legal)but after reading about the hair loss side effects I changed my mind. Does the transplanted hair suffer from heavy steroid use or does it stay protected? Thank you

I believe that the permanent zone hair (the hair we transplant) is protected from steroids. The other hair that is not the rim hair around the sides and back of the head can be ‘killed off’ with steroids in those genetically prone to balding.

Yes, we see many, many weight lifters who have accelerated their hair loss and like you, panic when they see it falling out. The high they get from the steroids and the benefits in the sport, seem to offset the liability for most of them.