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Hair Loss News Archives
December 2007
Women lose their hair too
Dec 2007
Hair loss in women is not uncommon. Studies have shown that it takes place in
more than one-third of all women sometime during their life.
Although certainly not life threatening, it can have a significant emotional
effect.
The most common type of hair loss in women is female pattern hair loss. It is
often familial.
Although female pattern hair loss can take place at any age after puberty, it
occurs more frequently in older individuals. By age 70, 38 percent of women
experience female pattern hair loss. Typically, the hair loss occurs in the
center of the scalp, although the sides can also be affected.
Other types of hair loss include the loss of hair that takes place after certain
physical or emotional situations such as stress, surgery, a major illness, rapid
weight loss, hormonal abnormalities and poor nutrition.
In these situations the hair loss usually doesn't appear until two or three
months after the onset of the problem. If the physical or emotional situation is
corrected the hair frequently returns.
A variety of medications may also cause hair loss. Some of these medications are
allopurinol, used to treat gout; catopril that treats high blood pressure; and
tegretol used to manage seizures.
A less common cause of female hair loss is alopecia areata in which clumps of
hair are lost. At times there can be complete loss of hair. Alopecia areata
appears to be due to some type of immunological problem.
Treatment of female pattern baldness includes medications such as minoxidil.
Studies have shown that minoxidil used twice a day results in minimal hair
growth in 50 percent of the patients and moderate hair growth in 13 percent
after eight months of treatment.
An increasing number of women are undergoing hair transplantation for this
condition. Hair is taken from the back of the scalp and transplanted to the
center of the scalp where the hair is sparse. Hair transplantation can be fairly
expensive.
Although sometimes difficult to do, it is important to determine the cause of
the hair loss so the most effective treatment can be started.
Dr. Murray Feingold is the physician in chief of the National Birth Defects
Center, medical editor of WBZ-TV and WBZ radio, and president of the Genesis
Fund. The Genesis Fund is a nonprofit organization that funds the care of
children born with birth defects, mental retardation and genetic diseases.