Hair Falling Out? Don’t Panic!
Hair loss can be extremely difficult to accept and deal with especially for women. However, if you understand the common causes of this condition you can take steps to prevent it or reduce its severity. Hair loss in women can be absolutely devastating for the sufferer’s self image and emotional well being.
Treatment of this type of hair loss includes immunomodulating therapies such as glucocorticoids, topical immunotherapy, or anthralin, or biologic-responce modifiers such as Minoxidil. The choice of treatment depends on the patient’s age, as well as the extent of hair loss. Milder cases often see a greater improvement with treatment than severe cases. In no case does treatment restore full hair in patients with 100% scalp or body hair loss.
Even more unfortunately, the medical community also treats the issue of women’s hair loss as if it were nonexistent. Since hair loss doesn’t appear to be life threatening, most physicians pay little attention to women’s complaints about hair loss and essentially tell their patients that “it’s no big deal” and that “you’ll just have to live with it.”
Stress and some illnesses such as anemia and infections, can also lead to hair loss. Stress can lead to an increase in hormones circulating through the blood stream and can also cause problems with the body systems responsible for hair growth. Infection can disrupt the normal operations of the body’s system and cause problems with normal hair growth and patterns.
The only proven treatment for female-pattern baldness is minoxidil. Most users see improvements, including a halt to the balding or slowing down of it, as well as thicker hair. Up to 25% of women experience hair regrowth. Other solutions include wigs, hair transplants (taking hair from the sides and back of the head) and plastic surgery (such as scalp reduction, where the bald area is removed and the bit with hair on is stretched forward).
Unfortunately many conventional doctors downplay hair loss as an inevitable part of aging for both sexes, treating it with topical products like Rogaine that enhance existing hair but offer no real solution to the causes of hair loss, and therefore no prevention of continued hair thinning. This leads many women — especially those in menopause — to think that there is nothing they can do to stop their hair loss.
Experts say our tresses usually grow at the rate of about one-half inch per month – with each hair having a growth phase of two to six years. At that point the hair “rests” for a period of time, then falls out – and the follicle from which it sprang soon starts growing a new strand. And so the cycle continues, usually well into our senior years.
Herbal Hair Loss Treatment
There are new hopes for those men and women who suffer from hair loss. Today there are an increased number of hair loss treatment options. Each hair loss treatment has a different success rate. With this medical condition it is best to seek a hair loss treatment at the onset of unusual hair loss. Very often if this disorder is not attended to it could eventually lead to baldness.
Minoxidil is a topical FDA approved hair loss treatment for women sold as Rogaine. This hair loss treatment is a pre-mixed solution in liquid form. This baldness hair loss treatment is applicable for both men and women. However, it tends to be more a mens hair loss treatment. Side effects are rare but often subside when the baldness hair loss treatment stops. Acne, headaches, blurred vision and lightheadness are some of the possible side effects. People who suffer from chest pains, palpitations, sudden weight gain, and fainting and heart problem should avoid using this hair loss treatment.
Finasteride is another FDA approved hair loss treatment for women and men and it is sold under drug names of Propecia and Proscar. Propecia is a pill that has to be taken orally everyday. It is mainly a mens hair loss treatment. Women who are pregnant must refrain from using Finasteride. Very often this baldness hair loss treatment can cause side effects. Rash, hives, itching, ejaculation problem, testicular pain and breast tenderness are some the common side effects. Propecia has a success rate of 80% as reported by its users. Propecia and Rogaine only work for hair loss occurring at the crown.
For those who have the money to spend there are permanent natural hair loss treatments such as hair weaving and hair transplants. In most cases people only resort to these hair loss treatments after achieving no results with other baldness hair loss treatments.
Laser hair loss treatment is another method that is available on the market today. This baldness hair loss treatment is most suitable for those who have just begun losing hair. Of course, there is always the hairpiece option which is readily available and not costly.
However hair loss treatments that use pharmaceutical medicines and surgery are expensive and come with some risks and harmful side effects. Hair loss in men is mainly caused by the male hormone DHT (dihydrotestosterone) in the body. In the case of women the causes could be either childbirth or hormones or hereditary thinning (alopecia) or menopause or hormone imbalance. Drug free hair loss treatment is clearly the best hair loss treatment possible as an alternative for conventional drugs, medications or surgery. Herbal hair loss treatment products are free of side effects and very affordable. These hair loss treatment herbal supplements have proven effective in stopping, preventing hair loss and stimulate regrowth of hair.
On the market there are excellent hair loss treatment herbal products that can be used by both men and women. For centuries drug free hair loss treatment herbs have been used by different cultures. Saw palmetto, rosemary, grape seed, bilberry and nettle are probably the most effective and popular herbal hair loss treatment herbs. These hair loss treatment herbal products blend special nutrients and herbs to inhibit DHT and to promote the regrowth of hair. To cure baldness, to stop hair loss and to regrow hair the hormone DHT in the body must be suppressed in men. For women the drug free hair loss treatment must be able to promote the growth of hair follicles.
Put a stop to your hair loss before you go bald! Safe and effective solution to prevent hair loss and to promote hair regrowth is at hand. For more information visit:
http://www.herbalhairlosstreatment.net
NBC TODAY – Battling Baldness / Lasers & Hair Transplant Surgery
Matt Lauer and Janice Lieberman discuss the medical treatments and procedures used to treat hair loss, including Propecia, Minoxidil/Rogaine, Laser Therapy and Hair Transplantation. Hair Transplants today are not your father’s ‘hair plugs’! Hair Transplant surgery can be virtually painless…
Propecia Was Huge In The Regrowth from Hair Loss
Four years ago I would go out to a night club and wear one of my favorite shirts and nicely pressed slacks and I would be told that I looked forty years old. It was very hard to take as I had just turned 36. I would go on to hear this kind of talk a lot around this time.
I moved to a new area and when I would go out, I would always get funny looks and reactions. I’ve always been an independent person so I didn’t mind going out to a local establishment alone but I was always friendly and had some kind of magnetism that seemed to always attract people.
Now don’t get me wrong. I’m just an average looking guy. I am tall and have always stayed in good shape and have always had a friendly and good sense of humor. Because I’m a bigger guy, people seem to make friends with me as I may make them feel comfortable. This is how it had always been since I was twenty years old. However, it wasn’t happening anymore. Inside I was still the same sarcastic, humorous and friendly person but on the outside I must have appeared to look like a loner or a physco-serial killer.
I have never went out of my way to make new friends. However, occasionally when you would just come across people I was getting negative reactions. I knew that there was nothing at all different about me except for one thing. I was still big and had a good body, I was still tan, I still had nice, clean white teeth. I still wore brand new expensive shirts. The only thing that had changed was my hair. It was thinning and looked miniaturized and it was very apparent.
I knew that this was my only draw back but I really didn’t know what to do about it. I always made a good living and the thought of hair transplants was totally out of the question. I thought about just shaving it as it seemed “that look” was becoming more common. But I could just never come to do it as I always had this thought in my mind that there was a solution.
I bought a bottle of Propecia and for some reason I kept it in my medicine cabinet for about 6 months. I think that I was scared to take it. Everything that I had read seemed to imply that there were too many side effects. At the time, I hadn’t begun to do any real research.
So I just hung in there and decided to start scouring the internet and do as much research as possible. I went to the discussion forums and I started to listen to a radio talk show about hair loss. The more that I researched, I started to realize that I must take the Propecia right away or my hair is going to start looking worse.
Even though I was still a little nervous I finally made a decision and I just went for it. I went to a Dermatologist and requested a prescription and he agreed that my hair was miniaturized and he felt that I would be a perfect candidate for Propecia. I had read in these forums that others were experimenting with this “big three” regimen and when I decided to get the prescription for the propecia, I would also start on the other two products as well. My plan was to give myself one full year of taking the three products and I would pray that the routine would work. After ninety days I was starting to see progress. As each month went by I would tell myself that I’m at 15% and now I’m at 20% and so on. Now that I look back, I see that I was being way too conservative. When I thought that I was at 50% of the way there and on the road to recovery, I was probably really only at 20%. I still had another 80% of improvement to go. As some people would say, I hadn’t even “scratched the surface”
After almost three years of this regimen I must say that I am very happy and that my results are definitely better then expected. I was a guy who had obvious hair loss to anybody that knew me or not. Now I’m a guy that still has a little frontal recession and still a little thinning in the crown and for the most part has a significant amount of hair.
I went out to a local establishment recently and a 27 year old guy talked to me for about an hour and he told me that he was 27 and that I’m “what 32,33?” I said try 39. He said “really, wow you actually look about 32 and you seem like a 32 year old” Of course the first thing that comes to your mind is that he was just trying to be nice and just complementing me. But I really believe that he was sincere as I have been getting a lot of this kind of treatment for the past year.
I can go out now and I have that magnetism again where people want to know me or talk to me instead of looking at me like I’m some crazy man. I still wear the nice shirts, I still work out and my body still looks as good as it did when I was 36, my teeth are still nice and white and I still look tan. The only thing that is different is my hair. It doesn’t look thin and miniaturized anymore. It looks like a normal full head of hair.
I truly believe that the way your hair looks tells a lot about a person’s age. The hair is the frame for your face and I must say I know that my hair looks 10 times better today then it did back when I was 36. You would think that since I have androgenic alopecia that my hair would look thinner and worse each year.
Actually the reverse has happened for me and time is actually on my side instead of against me because I have reversed the progression of my hair loss. Instead of having a higher level of DHT in my scalp miniaturizing my existing hair follicles, I take finasteride, better known as Propecia. Finasteride has been proven to block Type II 5 alpha reductace, the enzhyme that converts testosterone to DHT.
Although Propecia is the main player of The Big Three, there are still two other products that I feel must be taken. The three products taken together seem to work in a synergistic manner. Propecia does its thing, minoxidil has its role and nizoral also plays a key part. However, one plus one plus one equals four as far as the overall effect of the treatments. Nizoral makes Minoxidil more effective and Mixoxidil works better when taking propecia.
www.ReGrowNow.com is a web site that has been set up to educate the hair loss sufferer with real facts, articles and information. It is a website that has no products to sell. They will though send you free information and even Cd’s with audio files and hair loss information.
I have been taking the Big Three now for almost three years and I must say the regimen has really changed my life.
Author: Mark Brassia
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
Provided by: Guest blogger
The Art and Science of Hair Transplants
Doctors who perform hair transplants are finally getting their props! There was a time when performing hair transplant surgery was associated with unattractive hair plugs, telltale scars and botched hair transplants and rip-offs were more the norm. But not anymore!
The technology surrounding hair transplants has grown so precise that the newest hair transplant surgery is done under a microscope, called Follicular Unit Extraction where each hair follicle is removed and replaced one by one. And the newest way to avoid scarring when using a strip incision method was a surgical technique called a Trichophytic Closure which is a way of minimizing scars performed by trimming the edge of a line scar closure so that hair actually grows through the scar. In fact when hair follicles are taken one by one, the artistry involved in creating a natural-looking hairline becomes the hallmark of success of a hair transplant surgery.
Just take the case of Desiree, a 34-year-old performer who had lost the hair around her hairline from the way she wore her hair in dreadlocks for almost her entire adult life. She started noticing the fall-out as the dreads grew longer and heavier, now around her waist. And she also saw the telltale pimples that were her hair follicles screaming for help! She knew she’d have to make a change but the last thing she was thinking was that her search for help would lead her to hair transplants. First, things first, she went to see her hairstylist, a friend she’d known for years but whom she hadn’t used her services because who needs a hairstylist when you have dreadlocks? She tried to help by removing the dreads entirely and by creating a new, naturally curly hairstyle for Desiree. But she emphasized that she couldn’t guarantee the problem would resolve itself and sent her directly to a dermatologist to find out whether the one inch of hair loss she suffered all around her hairline was permanent or not.
Desiree went to the dermatologist who prescribed some cortisone injections and creams to relieve the swelling and inflammation where her hair was pulling, an antibiotic for the pimples so they wouldn’t get even more infected and some Minoxidil to try to regrow her hair, if those hair follicles weren’t pulled literally to death. At that point, the dermatologist warned Desiree that hair transplant surgery might be in her future if she didn’t respond to the hair regrowth therapy. After five months of the Rogaine Treatment, Desiree didn’t see much hair regrowth and while she was enjoying her new look she was worried about how strange her face must look with her hair starting so far back, she started to get upset and even wore her head wrapped after a while.
The last time she visited the dermatologist, he said she should consider hair transplant surgery because she was a good candidate. The hair in the back of her head was still extremely healthy and full and because her skin was light and had resulted in no scarring from the original trauma and infections and because she was still young. “Hair transplants?” Desiree thought to herself, “Me?” she just didn’t see how that would help her. After all, she wasn’t some desperate, balding, middle-aged man.
But she had been reading about the procedure online after her dermatologist told her about it. What she read about hair transplants astounded her: Surgeons transplanted each hair follicle one by one in such a way could recreate any hairline shape exactly. That beside the medical skill, there was a great deal of artwork intrinsic to the procedure and that’s what attracted her to hair transplants finally. She decided to look up the best doctor who specialized in hair transplant surgery for women that she could find in her state. She even looked for old pictures of herself before the hair loss (and she’d have to go back about 10 years) to see what her hairline even looked like. She had forgotten that she’d had a slight cowlick at her side part line – but with today’s hair transplants she could get any hairline she wanted and she did!
Travis M. Keeler is a hair loss expert with specialized knowledge of nonsurgical hair replacement and hair transplant surgery. For more information about the opportunities and pitfalls of hair replacement, please visit: Hair Replacement Video.
Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/hair-loss-articles/the-art-and-science-of-hair-transplants-1742631.html
Head Bleeding After Hair Restoration
Last winter, I was in San Jose watching a Sharks hockey game when I met a man sitting next to me who had had a hair transplant done not too long ago. There was blood seeping out rather noticeably out of his head. He thought it was not a big deal for that to happen, and didn’t think it was something he needed to tell his hair restoration doctor about.
I told him I am quite the crackerjack when it comes to hair transplants and gave him my phone number. I spoke to him and mentioned that blood oozing out can happen at times. But it is not a pleasant situation after a hair transplant procedure.
About one whole day after surgery, there may be some blood percolating out from the donor head area. Doctors commonly wrap a thick sort of cloth, like a bandage, around the head for about a day. The next day after the surgery, a person is to go to the clinic again and the staff will remove the bandage and then wash the hair. After shampooing and lightly washing the hair, as long as there isn’t any more bleeding (which usually doesn’t happen), the bandage will no longer be necessary.
After that, the man who underwent the surgery will have to wait six months before allowing any sunlight exposure on his head. Also, he or she is to avoid strenuous exercises and sports like wrestling, basketball, flag football, and grappling. It could damage the donor area.
For other cosmetic-related questions and answers, do a Web search on Dermal Filler in Long Beach. Also, if you’re interested in getting rid of forehead wrinkles, dysport, or botox, check out an Encino Laser Hair Removal center.
Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/hair-loss-articles/head-bleeding-after-hair-restoration-1650555.html
Hair Replacement Transplant Guide – Important Information That Many Don’t Know About This Procedure
Chances are you have had previous hair transplant that not only ended up as a disappointment to you, but equally left you with lots of scars. Well, not to worry you can always go for another hair transplantation procedure that can help to cover those scars. All you need to do this time is to ensure you get the best hair loss center to carry out the procedure for you. You will also need to do an intensive research with the intention to make a standard comparison of different hair transplants.
It is easy to compare and even confuse hair transplantation with skin grafting, but they are essentially different. In skin grafting, the surgeon that performs the operation has to remove grafts of dermis that typically still contain almost all of the epidermis surrounding the hair follicle as well from the donor site to the recipient site. In hair replacement by hair transplantation, many tiny grafts are transplanted rather than a single strip of skin. Read more
