Posts Tagged ‘young patients with hair loss’

Finasteride, Biotin or Hair Transplant

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

Q:

I went to a couple different hair transplant doctors for evaluations when I was 24/25 and was told I have a juvenile hairline and that i have a good donor area and scalp laxity. The doctors recommended around 2000 grafts to fill in the diffused area at the time.

One of the doctors I visited told me to give propecia another try which I did for an additional six more months, but stopped because it seemed to have no effect and from my understanding it doesn’t really help with hair in the frontal area which was my main problem. I also did not want to risk getting any more health side effects from taking propecia.

During this time I was also taking biotin supplements which I had read are good for hair but they didn’t have any noticeable effects. I decided against getting a hair transplant because of my age and I wanted to see if the hair might grow back naturally (some people who have lost hair from accutane reported regrowing their hair several years after taking the medication).

I have a history of MPB in my family but it seems to be hit or miss. My grandfathers both had full heads of hair, my dad and 1 of his brothers are completely bald but another brother has a full head of hair. My mom has 1 brother who is bald and another with very thick hair and a low hairline (which my hair most closely resembled before taking accutane). I also have a brother who is 21 and has extremely thick hair like I used to with no signs of hair loss whatsoever.

A:

Parsa Mohebi, MD. Hair Restoration SpecialistMale patterned baldness (MPB) is a progressive condition and it generally won’t get better without treatment.  The medications that are being used for the treatment of hair loss are generally for maintaining your existing hair and have preventative effects rather than restoring your hair at its full thickness like what you had in previous years.

A good hair transplant surgeon can help you realize what the best options for hair restoration are; whether it is a surgery or medication.  Using Accutane could cause hair loss as one side effect, but that is reversible within a few months after stopping it.  That is the most common case for medication related hair losses.

It is important for you to develop a good relationship with a qualified hair transplant surgeon whom you can trust.  Then let him walk you through this process.  Using medications for a while is a good idea and some patients respond well to using them.  Unfortunately the results are not permanent and most hair loss sufferers continue losing hair, but at a slower rate.

You can use medications such as Propecia or Rogaine to minimize the speed of hair loss. When it is the time for a hair transplant you can consider that as another option as well.

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Tretinoin and Minoxidil Combination for Treatment of Hair Loss

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Q:

How are you doing? All I have to say is TGIF.

I was doing a little bit research on hair loss, and I stumbled over retinoic acid. I read about it and have a basic understanding. Have you heard any claims that it could possible revive hair loss?

Have a great weekend!

A:

Rogaine

This is a good question. There are several claims on therapeutic effect of all-trans-retinoic acid (tretinoin) alone and in combination with 0.5% minoxidil for hair loss based on limited studies.

In one study the combination of tretinoin and minoxidil was used for 56 patients who had androgenic alopecia (male pattern baldness) and hair growth was followed. The growth of terminal hair was studied after one year of treating balding scalp with combination of topical tretinoin with 0.5% minoxidil. Increase in hair growth was reported in 58% of the patients who could complete the study.

Although tretinoin has been stated as a promoter of cell proliferation and vascular creation, which are both important in hair growth, there is still not enough scientific evidence from large studies to prove these effects. Also double blind studies on the efficiency and adverse effects of the product is lacking.

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Psychology of Hair Transplant

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

I just received the last issue of the Hair Transplant Forum International, the Journal of International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS). Our article, Psychology of Hair Transplant‚ is published as the cover article on this issue of the journal. I also have a copy of the article in our hair loss library in our website. Here is the abstract:

Psychology of Hair Transplant

Hair Trnsplant Forum Inernational

Parsa Mohebi, M.D., William Rassman, M.D.

Balding and its psychological impacts has been the subject of many studies in the past. The relationship between hair loss and stress is clear to all clinicians who practice in this field. Negative psychosocial impacts of hair loss in male patterned baldness and in women with generalized thinning have also been seen. Many of us (hair transplant surgeons) have seen the negative effects of hair loss on self esteem and self-image.

We know that hair loss impacts some men sex life and their stability with regard to career choices in men of different ages. Despite the solid evidences and published literature on psychological impact of hair loss, the corrective effect of medical and surgical hair restoration has never been studied. After observing the drastic changes in patient behavior and the high level of patient satisfaction in those who had hair transplant procedure, we were motivated to look into the psychological impact of hair restoration on different aspects of a patient’s life.

Psychology of hair transplant graph

We came up with a series of criteria that could have been modified by having a hair restoration procedure; we used some indexes that were previously studied comparing bald and non bald men on different psychological variables. We initially performed a pilot study and asked patients about different aspects of their lives during their post op visits. We gave our patients open ended questionnaires and probed their psychological state after their hair restoration procedure was complete. Eventually we focused in on eight major criteria that have been reported and documented as variables associated with hair loss in the literature. We collected a subset of them in our pilot study. Included were questions on the general level of happiness, energy level, feeling of youthfulness, anxiety levels, self confidence, outlook on their future and impact on their sex life.

We have chosen the patients who had their first hair transplant surgery between one to three years from the time of our study, so they had seen the final result of their hair restoration procedure. We limited the study to male patients with male pattern baldness and the ones who had surgeries less than three years ago so they still had a fresh memory of the changes they experienced. Each patient had exclusively follicular unit transplants that reflected our standard of care for that period. We sent a questionnaire with a brief description on the nature of this scientific study. We did not collect any patient identifiers and the response was totally voluntary. We sent the two hundred questionnaires with stamped return envelope.

The response rate to our questionnaire was 37 (18%). Each patient was used as his own control since we asked about the changes that they experienced after surgery in comparison to those variables before the surgery. We used T-test to compare patient’s responses. Table 1 shows the mean and standard error in eight different criteria that were asked. Patients had significant improvements in all eight criteria regardless of their stage of baldness and their ages.

In another attempt to compare psychological changes that patients experienced in different stages of baldness, we divided patients into two groups: (1) those who had Norwood IV patterns or less and (2) the ones with Norwood V patterns and above. We observed the most significant difference in two categories, (a) sex life and (b) career experience. Patients with less balding had a greater impact on their sex life and career when compared to patients who had more advanced stages of hair loss. These changes were not age related.

Hair restoration surgery can affect many aspects of a patient’s life. Hair transplant can potentially reverse psycho-social problems associated with hair loss. The positive impact of hair restoration surgery is more visible among patients who suffer from those undesirable effects the most. In early stages of hair loss, patients may have more awareness of their condition and they might be more affected than men in the later stages of hair loss.

Patients who experienced hair loss at an early age while involved in an active social life were more prone to the negative side effects of balding. That could explain why younger people with hair loss appeared more benefited by hair restoration procedures. Also it could be assumed that hair loss can have a negative impact on a patient’s outlook which seems to reverse after receiving a hair restoration procedure which improved their outlook.

Low response rate from a blind mailing has always been a drawback in questionnaire studies. We received 37 out of 200 of the questionnaires that we sent out (response rate was 18.5%). Giving incentives to responders may be a good way of increasing the participation rate of any questionnaire studies. We presented the result of this study at the annual scientific meeting of ISHRS and have been contacted by many of our colleagues who expressed interest in collaborating in a larger scale study. We are currently trying to rise funding for repeating this study to optimize our response rate and the statistical value of the study.

If you have any questions on the content of this article you can contact US Hair Restoration office at Los Angeles through email at info@ushairrestoration or phone.

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