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Posts Tagged ‘stop hair loss’

Treatments of alopecia

July 15th, 2010

Alope­cia means hair loss and hair loss is some­thing many Amer­i­cans are suf­fer­ing from. It is impor­tant to know what your treat­ment options are.

The word alope­cia means “hair loss”. It does not refer to any spe­cific hair dis­eases. There are two types of Alope­cia, per­ma­nent and non– per­ma­nent. Per­ma­nent alope­cia is irre­versible; the hair loss is asso­ci­ated with the destruc­tion of the hair fol­li­cle. Non per­ma­nent alope­cia is reversible; the hair has a chance for regrowth. Scar­ring alope­cia an exam­ple of per­ma­nent alope­cia and is not reversible there is no treat­ment for this dis­ease. Treat­able types of alope­cia are tel­o­gen efflu­vium, ana­gen efflu­vium and alope­cia areata. The treat­ment for tel­o­gen efflu­vium depends on the cause, in some cases a major surgery may cause this type of alope­cia to occur. The med­ica­tion Minox­i­dil can be used to treat this type of alope­cia. It is a direct hair growth stim­u­la­tor; it pro­motes the tel­o­gen hair fol­li­cles to fol­low their nor­mal cycli­cal growth by induc­ing the ana­gen growth phase. There are a range of treat­ments for alope­cia areata but it may not be effec­tive for every­one. The most com­mon treat­ment for this dis­ease involves the use of cor­ti­cos­teroids, hair restora­tion is very com­mon as well for cor­rect­ing this form of alopecia.

Hair loss in women caused by menopause

June 15th, 2010

Hair plays an impor­tant role in the female world. Many women are defined by their outer appear­ance. Hav­ing beau­ti­ful healthy hair is a part of the equa­tion that women use to mea­sure their beauty and appear­ance. Although hair loss in women is just as com­mon as it is in men, it is more dif­fi­cult to deal with. Hair loss occurs for a wide vari­ety of rea­sons and there are a hand­ful causes at the cen­ter of this problem.

One doc­u­mented med­ical con­di­tion know to com­monly to cause hair loss in women is menopause. When a woman begins to enter menopause the lev­els of estro­gen in the body begins to decrease. Estro­gen is needed to help pro­duce testos­terone. The cor­rect lev­els of testos­terone make it pos­si­ble for hair to con­tinue to grow and main­tain a healthy cycle. With­out enough estro­gen and testos­terone the growth of hair begins to slow result­ing in hair loss.

Women pat­tern bald­ness is typ­i­cally the thin­ning of the hair on the top of the scalp. For many, it can get quite thin, leav­ing women feel­ing very inse­cure and try­ing dif­fer­ent hair­styles to con­ceal the prob­lem. Unfor­tu­nately, they usu­ally opt for styles which can fur­ther dam­age hair fol­li­cles, lead­ing to more thinning.

In the past, women teased their hair, pulled it back in pony tails, or permed it to hide their secret. But, now there is some­thing that can be done to treat this prob­lem. In fact, if it is caught in time, hair can be regrown by using the proper treatment.

History of Hair Transplantation by San Diego Hair Restoration

April 5th, 2010

The roots of mod­ern day were cul­ti­vated in Japan in the late 1930s. In 1939, Japan­ese der­ma­tol­o­gist Dr. Okuda detailed his ground­break­ing work in sur­gi­cal hair restora­tion for burn vic­tims. He described using a punch tech­nique to extract round sec­tions of hair-bearing skin, which were then implanted into slightly smaller round holes made in the scarred or burned areas of the scalps of his patients. After the skin grafts healed, they con­tin­ued to pro­duce hair in the pre­vi­ously bald areas of scalp. In 1943 another Japan­ese der­ma­tol­o­gist refined Okuda’s tech­nique by using sig­nif­i­cantly smaller grafts of one to three hairs to replace lost pubic hair in his female patients.

In 1952, Dr. Nor­man Oren­tre­ich, a New York der­ma­tol­o­gist, per­formed the first known hair trans­plant in the U.S. on a man suf­fer­ing from male pat­tern bald­ing. Oren­tre­ich essen­tially rein­vented modern-day hair transplantation.

Seven years later, after much crit­i­cism, Oren­tre­ich pub­lished his find­ings and set forth his the­ory of “donor dom­i­nance” in the Annals of the New York Acad­emy of Sci­ences. His work demon­strated that the hair from the back and the sides of a man’s scalp was for the most part resis­tant to the bald­ing process. How­ever, his tech­nique mir­rored the less aes­thet­i­cally “punch graft” process of Okuda instead of the more nat­ural, smaller graft­ing tech­nique of Tamura.

It wasn’t until the mid 1990s that sur­gi­cal hair restora­tion pro­duced natural-looking results. Newer tech­niques, such as fol­lic­u­lar unit micro graft­ing, fol­lic­u­lar unit trans­plan­ta­tion, and fol­lic­u­lar unit extrac­tion, have made hair trans­plan­ta­tion a vir­tu­ally unde­tectable, viable option for many.

Proper hair care prevents hair loss

February 12th, 2010

Nor­mal hair loss can be char­ac­ter­ized as see­ing hair on your comb after using it. Every one of us loses hair on a daily bases, it is a part of the many renewal processes that are built into our bod­ies sys­tem.  But if you find your­self con­stantly hav­ing to clean your home because of hairs on the floor, it is time to become aware of proper hair care to pre­vent hair loss. The prob­lem could already exist, due to hered­ity rea­sons or hor­mones but it is pos­si­ble to reduce hair loss by sim­ply apply­ing these ben­e­fi­cial tips to your life.

Tips against Hair Loss

Pre­ven­ta­tive hair loss tips that you can apply to your every­day life.

  • Comb hair every day gen­tly with­out pulling and break­ing the hair unnecessarily
  • Avoid using excess hair gel and hairspray
  • Brush hair when dry not when wet
  • Con­sume a Healthy Diet
  • Reg­u­lar exercise
  • Do not ignore wash­ing of your hair every alter­nate day
  • Know your hair type and then apply nec­es­sary prod­ucts on your hair
  • Always avoid strong chem­i­cal hair products
  • Mas­sag­ing the Scalp
  • Proper Stress Management

Hair Loss Myths

February 1st, 2010

Hair loss occu­pies all of us. If we are not expe­ri­enc­ing hair loss, we have a close friend or rel­a­tive who does. In fact, mil­lions suf­fer from hair loss. It is only nat­ural that there are many mis­con­cep­tions about hair loss, and could be why so many have a dif­fi­cult time dis­tin­guish­ing fact from fic­tion. When deal­ing with hair loss con­cerns it is best to search out the more com­mon bald­ing myths and gain aware­ness of the facts. When becom­ing more aware of the facts you can then decide which hair loss treat­ment will be most effec­tive for your per­sonal require­ments. The fol­low­ing myths are 5 of the most com­mon hair loss misconceptions.

  1. The myth – Wear­ing a hat may stim­u­late hair loss

The Truth – Unless your hat is so tight that it puts exces­sive ten­sion on the hair, it doesn’t mat­ter if you wear a hat every day.

  1. The myth– Cut­ting  your hair will make it grow back thicker

The truth– Hair feels thicker after a hair cut because hair is thicker at the base but cut­ting your hair will not help pre­vent male or female-pattern baldness

  1. The myth – Stress may cause per­ma­nents hair loss

The truth – In some cases, stress may only cause tem­po­rary hair loss

  1. The myth– Only men expe­ri­ence hair loss

The truth– male pat­tern bald­ness is more com­mon but, a lot of women suf­fer from hair loss and thinning.

  1. The myth– Peo­ple who do not suf­fer from hair loss have no shed­ding of hair at all

The truth– Every­one loses hair. Aver­age hair loss is about 50 per day.

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