Hair Loss Cause and Solutions?

I am a 36 year old American Indian female with very long black hair. I have noticed that i have been losing my hair on top by my center part. I have bi-polar disorder, i have been on the same prescription for two years. I have always had extremely thick hair and now it feels so thin. What do you think could be causing this and what can i do to get my hair back to it’s normal fullness? I do not get periods anymore, i had a uterin embolisation three yrs ago. I am very vain about my waist length hair. Please help me.

There are many medications that can cause hair loss. It would be helpful to know what medications you are on.

With women hair loss can begin in your 30s, 40s, or 50s due to normal female pattern hair loss. The cause of this form of hair loss is not as well understood as male pattern hair loss. It will generally leave an intact frontal hair line with loss beginning just behind this. Over time it continues into the top and the very back of the top scalp. It can also involve the sides and back of the scalp in some women. All women with hair loss should rule out hormonal diseases including hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, and an elevated level of male hormones. You should also be checked for iron deficiency anemia that can come from heavy periods though this does not seem possible in your case. Laboratory testing includes a T4, TSH, FSH, LH, DHEA, CBC, Ferritin level. Some connective tissue diseases such as lupus can cause hair loss so you might check a WESR and an ANA. If you are having joint problems such as arthritis, this might point to a connective tissue disease.

If all these tests are normal, consider two 4mm biopsies of the affected area that should be read by someone who is a dermatopathologist experienced in reading hair biopsies. It is important to obtain intact hair follicles when taking these biopsies and they must be taken from where you are having hair loss. These can often identify the cause also tell us if you have a more difficult form of hair loss to treat such as a scarring alopecia such as lichen planopilaris.

Someone experienced in evaluating hair loss might be able to help evaluate possible cause of your condition by performing an examination of the hair shaft diameters and a hair pull test.

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Hair Transplant Surgery Resources

If I’m not totally sure to have a hair transplant, what are some good resources to help understand the process?

Understanding the process is of the utmost importance when considering hair transplant surgery. Many men have wound up with less than desirable results due to lack of information and/or the sales techniques of unscrupulous clinics. Hair Transplant:Hair Restoration Information And Resources
The forhair.com website is a good place to start. There is a voluminous amount of information there with which a person may educated themselves about hair transplantation, the various methods of “harvesting” the hairs for transplant, and also about expectations and outcomes of the procedure.
The non-surgical treatments for hair loss are also discussed at length; this website has more written information that most potential candidates could read in many weeks. The information is truthful, in depth and free from the slick marketing techniques of many clinics.

Check these Hair transplant information and resources:
Forhair.com–Hair Transplant Information
Forhair Hair Transplant Forum
Hair Transplant Guide
IAHRS.ORG
Hair Transplant Information on this site:
Hair Transplant On Hair Loss Press

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Hair Restoration Transection Rate

Are many hairs transected as the surgeon makes extractions on the donor during hair transplantation?

Good question. The answer is that it varies wildly from surgeon to surgeon and clinic to clinic. We take great pride in having achieved some of the lowest transection rates in the hair transplant world.

Our transection rates with CIT are averaging less than 3% which is very low compared to the industry as a whole. Some published papers on FUE and other single graft harvesting techniques cite transection rates as high as 50 to 70% from their own clinics! This is a travesty, and should be mentioned only to be condemned. .

Single blade strip surgery has average initial transection rates (in our hands) of about 2%; again, it is all over the map depending upon the experience and expertise of the surgeon, and at least for strip, upon the experience and expertise of the surgical staff. One of the most important variables is the surgical technician staff; after the strip is harvested, the tissue is processed by these technicians. Their transection rates can range from 5% up to as much as 50% of the grafts, and is dependent on their training and skill. This is why quality control in a hair transplant practice is so very important (but unfortunately is not the norm by any means). In our practice, CIT has a lower transection rate <3% than strip; in strip cases, our technicians’ transection rates, plus the transection during harvest, averages 5%. So for us, even this relatively low strip transection exceeds our even lower CIT transection!
Remember that the training and expertise of hair transplant surgeons runs the gamut, from beginners with virtually no experience to speak of, to veterans with thousands of cases and thousands of quality results under their belts. However, there is one other factor that comes into play, which is standards. A physician may have years of experience, but set the standards in his practice very low. In this situation, sloppy work and poor technique, combined with minimal staff oversight and quality control, may produce high transection rates and other conditions that lead to mediocre results at best, and cosmetic disasters at worst.

We are proud of the high quality and dedication to excellence that we are known for!

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Gene Therapy For Hair Loss

I have heard that it is possible through gene therapy and biological methods to make straight here permanent curly. Do you know if this is on the market yet for cosmetic purposes and if so please can you provide contact details of the clinics.

There are many potential gene therapies being investigated now. One company in San Diego (which researchers do not name) is supposedly working on a cream to help regrow hair using gene therapy. They evidently are also working on one to turn grey hair back to its dark original color, and one to cause a “permanent permanent” (straight hair turned curly). These are a ways off from being released to the public, if they even prove to be effective.
If they do work, at least partially, they would then have to go through FDA approval, which may take years and cost tens of millions of dollars (although there would certainly be plenty of investors in a product that would cure baldness, for example).
Also, there are many ethical questions that are only now being raised regarding gene therapy. Some have to do with creating “cosmetic or aesthetic perfection” for those who can afford it, and creating an underclass of “cosmetically challenged” humans, who cannot.
Gene Therapy
Certainly no one is going to forbid someone from marketing a cure for baldness, or a “genetic permanent”; however, these possibilities are at this point just that: possibilities. The press tends to take these things and run with them, but they are often exaggerated and made to seem closer to mass consumption than they really are.

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Woman’s Hair Loss And Stress

I’m a woman over 40 and was diagnosed with androgenetic alopecia ten years ago. My 16 year old is losing her hair. I took her to the derm and was told that it is stress related. The doctor said that she did not see the genetic pattern. My daughter is losing her hair on the sides above the temple and also in her part. Isn’t this genetic pattern? I don’t know if I buy the whole stress theory. The doctor spent 5 minutes with us and ran her fingers through my daughters hair. Can stress hair loss mimic androgenetic?

There might be a stress component, but it is not a common cause of hair loss except with alopecia areata, which tends to be well circumscribed and circular in shape. There are different kinds of stress. There is mental stress and there is physical stress such as a severe illness or significant trauma. Physical stress can produce a global form of hair loss.
The fact that mom has the diagnosis of AA increases the chance of the daughter having a similar problem, however at 16, she is a bit young for that. Other possibilities are polycystic ovary syndrome; one would expect other signs of androgen excess with this (facial hair, acne, increased body hair, etc). The sides of the scalp are not a common area for androgen excess to present itself. Female pattern loss can involve the sides of the scalp however. Woman Hair Loss
I am unsure what is meant by “above the ear”. If the loss is in the fronto-temporal recess, it could be androgenetic alopecia; if it is on the sides (parietal), that is unlikely and it may be a diffuse patterned or unpatterned alopecia.
The loss through the area of the “part” may indicate a Ludwig pattern of AA, which is a more typical “female” pattern, as opposed to the “male” pattern of temporal recession and loss of the hairline.
A thorough workup with a physician specializing in hair loss would be your best option at this point. You should look for any changes in density or hair diameter. You could follow this up with a biopsy properly performed. Make certain to perform some lab tests to look for anemia, androgen excess, iron deficiency, or a thyroid dysfunction.

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