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Baldness
Baldness is a trait which involve the state of lacking hair
where it often grows, especially on the head. The most common form
of baldness is a progressive hair thinning condition called androgenic
alopecia or 'male pattern baldness' that occurs in adult human males
and some primate species. The severity and nature of baldness can
vary greatly; it ranges from male and female pattern alopecia (androgenetic
alopecia, also called androgenic alopecia or alopecia androgenetica),
alopecia areata, which involves the loss of some of the hair from
the head, and alopecia totalis, which involves the loss of all head
hair, to the most extreme form, alopecia universalis, which involves
the loss of all hair from the head and the body. Treatment for alopecia
has limited success. The more hair lost, the less successful the
treatment will be.
Contents
Etiology
Incidence of pattern baldness varies from population to population
based on diet and personal habits. One large scale study in Maryborough,
in central Victoria (Australia) showed the prevalence of mid-frontal
hair loss increases with age and affects 57% of women and 73.5%
of men aged 80 and over.
Male pattern baldness is characterized by hair receding from the
lateral sides of the forehead, known as "receding hairline"
or "receding brow." An additional bald patch may develop
on top (vertex). The trigger for this type of baldness (called androgenic
alopecia because it is caused by male hormones or androgens) is
DHT, a powerful sex hormone.
The mechanism by which DHT accomplishes this is not yet understood.
In genetically-prone scalps, DHT initiates a process of follicular
miniaturization. Through the process of follicular miniaturization,
hair shaft width is progressively decreased until scalp hair resembles
fragile vellus hair or "peach fuzz" or else becomes non-existent.
Onset of hair loss sometimes begins as early as end of puberty,
and is mostly genetically determined. Male pattern baldness is classified
on the Hamilton-Norwood scale I-VIII.
Female pattern baldness, in which the midline parting of the hair
appears broadened, is less common. It is believed to result from
a decrease in estrogen, a hormone that normally counteracts the
balding effect of testosterone, which normally occurs in women's
blood. Female pattern baldness is classified on the Ludwig scale
I-III.
It was previously believed that baldness was inherited from a person's
maternal grandfather. While there is some basis for this belief,
both parents contribute to their offspring's likelihood of hair
loss. Most likely, inheritance is technically "autosomal dominant
with mixed penetrance" (see 'baldness folklore' below)
There are several other kinds of baldness:
- Traction alopecia is most commonly found in people with ponytails
or cornrows who pull on their hair with excessive force. Wearing
a hat shouldn't generally cause this, though it is a good idea
to let your scalp breathe for 7 hours a day.
- Traumas such as chemotherapy, childbirth, major surgery, poisoning,
and severe stress may cause a hair loss condition known as telogen
effluvium.
- Some mycotic infections can cause massive hair loss.
- Alopecia areata is an autoimmune disorder also known as "spot
baldness" that can result in hair loss ranging from just
one location (Alopecia areata monolocularis) to every hair on
the entire body (Alopecia areata universalis).
- Localized or diffuse hair loss may also occurs in cicatricial
alopecia (lupus erythematosus, lichen plano pilaris, folliculitis
decalvans, central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia, postmenopausal
frontal fibrosing alopecia, etc.). Tumours and skin outgrowths
also induce localized baldness (sebaceous nevus, basal cell carcinoma,
squamous cell carcinoma).
Etymology
The term Alopecia (al-oh-PEE-she-uh) is formed from the Greek alopex,
meaning fox. The origin of this usage is because this animal sheds
its coat twice a year.
The term "bald" derives from the English word balde,
which means "white."
Approaches to baldness
Psychological implications
The psychological implications for individuals experiencing hair
loss vary widely. The most significant effect is a loss of self-confidence.
This is enhanced by an insecure or ambivalent attachment pattern.
Alopecia induced by cancer chemotherapy has been reported to cause
changes in self-concept and body image. Body image does not return
to the previous state after regrowth of hair for a majority of patients.
In such cases, patients have difficulties expressing their feelings
(what is called alexithymia) and may be more prone to avoiding family
conflicts. Family therapy can help families to cope with these psychological
problems if they arise.
Psychological problems due to baldness, if present, are typically
most severe at the onset of symptoms.
Some balding men may feel proud of their baldness, feeling a kindred
relationship with famous charismatic bald film actors such as Yul
Brynner, Vin Diesel, Michael Chiklis, Telly Savalas, Ben Kingsley,
Patrick Stewart or Bruce Willis, politicians such as Abe Beame,
or sportsmen like wrestler "Stone Cold" Steve Austin or
tennis star Andre Agassi, who have been considered masculine and
handsome in part because of their most obvious distinguishing feature.
This is not yet true for women, as there are few female celebrities
who are bald by choice, chemotherapy or genetics/environment.
Many companies have built a successful business selling products
that reverse baldness, by allegedly regrowing hair, transplanting
hair or selling hairpieces.
Preventing and
reversing hair loss
See Also: Baldness treatments
It is easier to prevent the falling out of healthy hairs than to
regrow hair in follicles that are already dormant. Finasteride (marketed
in the U.S. as Propecia) and minoxidil (marketed in the U.S. as
Rogaine, and some places as Regaine) have shown some success in
partially reversing loss. In a one one-year study of finasteride,
evaluation after one year showed five of 21 subjects (23.8%) had
two-grade improvement in MNHS grade on a modified Norwood/Hamilton
scale and 12 of 21 subjects (57.1%) had one-grade improvement; the
others remained at the same grade. However such treatments are generally
ineffective at treating extreme cases of hair loss.
The prospective treatment of hair multiplication/hair cloning,
which extracts self-replenishing follicle stem cells, multiplies
them many times over in the lab, and microinjects them into the
scalp, has been shown to work in mice, and is currently under development,
expected by some scientists to be available to the public in 2009-2015.
Subsequent versions of the treatment are expected by some scientists
to be able to cause these follicle stem cells to simply signal the
surrounding hair follicles to rejuvenate.*
Topical application of ketoconazole, which is both an anti-fungal
and a potent 5-alpha reductase inhibitor, is often used as a supplement
to other approaches.
Interestingly, placebo treatments in studies often have reasonable
success rates, though not as high as the products being tested,
and even similar side-effects as the products. For example, in Finasteride
(propecia) studies, the percent of patients with any drug-related
sexual adverse experience was 3.8% compared with 2.0% in the placebo
group.
Regular aerobic exercise can help keep androgen levels naturally
lower while maintaining overall health and lowering stress, though
weight training may have a detrimental effect on hair by increasing
testosterone levels.
Stress reduction can be helpful in slowing hair loss.
Immunosuppresants applied to the scalp have been shown to temporarily
reverse hair loss, though the possibly lethal side effects of this
treatment make it untenable.
Saw Palmetto (Serenoa repens) is an herbal DHT inhibitor often
claimed to be cheaper and have fewer side effects than finasteride
and dutasteride. Unlike other 5alpha-reductase inhibitors, Serenoa
repens induces its effects without interfering with the cellular
capacity to secrete PSA. Saw palmetto extract has been demonstrated
to inhibit both isoforms of 5-alpha-reductase unlike finasteride
which only inhibits the (predominant) type 2 isoenzyme of 5-alpha-reductase.
Polygonum Multiflorum is a traditional Chinese cure for hair loss.
Whether the plant itself is useful, the general safety and quality
control of herbs imported from China can be questionable.
Beta Sitosterol, which is a constituent in many seed oils, can
help to treat BHP by lowering cholesterol. If used for this purpose,
an extract is best. Consuming large amounts of oil to get at small
quantities of beta sitosterol is likely to exacerbate male pattern
baldness.
Resveratrol, from grape skins, is a lipase inhibitor. By decreasing
the body's ability to absorb fat through the intestine walls, it
reduces the total fat and calorie content of a person's diet.
While drastic, broad spectrum anti-androgens such as flutamide
are sometimes used topically. Flutamide is potent enough to have
a feminizing effect in men, including growth of the breasts.
In March 2006, Curis announced that it had received the first preclinical
milestone, a $1,000,000 cash payment, in its hair growth program
with Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals, a division of The Procter
& Gamble Company. The program is focused on the potential development
of a topical Hedgehog agonist for hair growth disorders, such as
male pattern baldness and female hair loss.
Concealing hair loss
One method of hiding hair loss is the "comb over", which
involves restyling the remaining hair to cover the balding area.
It is usually a temporary solution, useful only while the area of
hair loss is small. As the hair loss increases, a comb over becomes
less effective.
Another method is to wear a hat or a hairpiece - a wig or toupee.
The wig is a layer of artificial or natural hair made to resemble
a typical hair style. In most cases the hair is artificial. Wigs
vary widely in quality and cost. In the United States, the best
wigs - those that look like real hair - cost up to tens of thousands
of dollars. Organizations such as Wigs for Kids and Locks of Love
collect individuals' donations of their own natural hair to be made
into wigs for young cancer patients who have lost their hair due
to chemotherapy or other cancer treatment.
Embracing baldness
Of course, instead of concealing hair loss, one may embrace it.
A shaved head will grow stubble in the same manner and at the same
rate as a shaved face. Many celebrities and athletes shave their
heads. They spread the message of baldness by shaving the heads
of adults to raise money for curing childhood cancer, which often
causes children to lose their hair (see Head shaving). Female baldness
is less socially accepted. Sharon Blynn, Bald Is Beautiful founder
and an ovarian cancer survivor whose motto is "Always smile
from the inside out!" encourages women to define beauty for
themselves on their own terms.
Baldness folklore
There are many myths regarding the possible causes of baldness
and its relationship with one's virility, intelligence, ethnicity,
job, social class, wealth etc. While skepticism is warranted due
to lack of scientific validation, some of these myths may have a
degree of underlying truth.
- "You inherit baldness from your mother's father."
Previously, early baldness of the androgenic type was thought
to be sex linked dominant in males and to be sex linked recessive
in females.
Research suggests that the gene for the androgen receptor, which
is significant in determining probability for hair loss, is located
on the X chromosome and so is always inherited from the mother's
side. There is a 50% chance that a person shares the same X chromosome
as their maternal grandfather. Because women have two X chromosomes,
they will have two copies of the androgen receptor gene while
men only have one.
However research has also shown that a person with a balding father
also has a significantly greater chance of experiencing hair loss.
- "Intellectual activity or psychological problems can
cause baldness."
This myth probably was inspired by the fact that the human brain
is located inside the skull, very close and just below where hair
grows, and so it was thought that the use and abuse as well as
mental diseases could have negative effect on hair growth and
number. It may also be due to the fact that cholesterol is involved
in the process of neurogenesis and also the base material from
which the body ultimately manufactures DHT. While the notion that
bald men are more intelligent may lack credibility in the modern
world, in the ancient world if a person was bald it was likely
that he had an adequate amount of fat in his diet. Thus, his mental
development was probably not stunted by malnutrition during his
crucial formative years, he was more likely to be wealthy, and
also have had access to a formal education. However a sedentary
lifestyle is less likely to correlate with intelligence in the
modern world, and dietary fat content is less strongly linked
to economic class in developed countries.
This is sometimes used as a stereotype in films, where the more
intellectual or rather frustrated characters are most usually
portrayed as bald and generally unattractive, as opposed to the
main characters which are usually portrayed as attractive, fit,
mentally stable and generally with no apparent hair problems.
This same myth normally extends to considering people having intellectual
jobs more prone to baldness problems compared to manual laborers,
sometimes further extending the myth to male college or university
students when compared to workers of the same age. The myth is
suspect because counterexamples can be found in any case.
There is evidence, confirmed by cross cultural studies, for an
association between androgen levels and intellectual ability.
These findings are controversial due to their implications regarding
psychology and gender.
Total testosterone exhibits a positive relation to tactual-spatial
abilities and to the degree of lateralization. Total testosterone
is negatively correlated with verbal fluency. Testosterone in
the saliva is also significantly positively correlated to tactual-spatial
test scores and, in addition, to field independence. DHT and the
ratio DHT/total testosterone are positively related to verbal
fluency and negatively to the degree of lateralization of tactual-spatial
performance.
- "Baldness can be caused by emotional stress, sexual
frustration etc."
Emotional stress has been shown to accelerate baldness in genetically
susceptible individuals.
Stress due to sleep deprivation in military recruits lowered testosterone
levels, but is not noted to have effected SHBG.
Thus, stress due to sleep deprivation in fit males is unlikely
to elevate DHT. Whether it can cause hair loss by some other mechanism
is not clear.
- "Bald men are more "virile" or sexually active
than others."
Levels of free testosterone are strongly linked to libido and
also DHT levels, but unless free testosterone is virtually non-existent
levels have not been shown to affect virility. Men with androgenic
alopecia are more likely to have a higher baseline of free androgens.
However sexual activity is multifactoral, and androgenic profile
is also not the only determining factor in baldness. Additionally,
because hair loss is progressive and free testosterone declines
with age, a person's hairline may be more indicative of their
past than present disposition.
- "Shaving hair makes it grow back stronger"
Proposed as a popular remedy against baldness, it's very probably
just an illusion similar to the one perceived after shaving one's
beard or mustache. Shaving one's head doesn't increase the number
of healthy hair present on the scalp, and, when the remaining
hair has grown a few millimeters, no enhancement in thickness
or overall quality can be observed.
- "Frequent ejaculation causes baldness"
There are many misconceptions about what can help prevent hairloss,
one of these being that frequent ejaculation may have an influence
on MPB. While ejaculation significantly lowers levels of relaxin
(a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor) in a male's body and causes testosterone
levels to temporarily elevate, the claim that frequent ejaculations
can cause baldness is often viewed with skepticism. Higher free
testosterone levels may correlate with both hairloss and increased
sex drive in predisposed individuals.
- "Standing on one's head alleviates baldness"
The "blood-flow" theory, which led men to stand on their
heads in the 1980's, can be found in the advertising for many
of the fake hair-loss treatments for sale on the internet. While
Minoxidil is a vasodilator and is speculated to work, in part,
by increasing blood flow to hair follicles, there is no evidence
that standing on one's head can alleviate baldness.
- "Tight hats cause baldness."
This one probably started in the military where young men entering
the service were required to wear hats and soon showed signs of
going bald, or at least of hair thinning. This is due to coincidental
timing. The age that young men enter the military is also the
same age that male pattern hair loss begins. This is due to dihydrotestosterone,
not hats. Hats do cause hair breakage and, to a lesser degree,
split ends. Since hats are not washed as frequently as other clothing,
they can also lead to scalp uncleanliness and possible P. ovale
contamination in men with naturally oily scalps.
Trivia
John D. Rockefeller had an extreme case of alopecia that caused
him to lose all of the hair on his face, including his eyebrows
and eyelashes. Another famous person who suffers from similarly
severe alopecia is Italian football referee Pierluigi Collina. Actor
Patrick Stewart lost most of his hair to male-pattern baldness by
age 19 (His natural "horse-shoe" of remaining hair can
be seen in the film L.A. Story).
Eunuchs do not go bald, due to reduced hormone levels.
Baldness is not only a human trait. Some other primates, such as
Chimpanzees, stump-tailed macaques, and South American nakari show
progressive thinning of the hair on the scalp after adolescence.
Adult stump-tailed macaques, in fact, are commonly used in laboratories
for the testing of hair-regrowth treatments.
The different predecessors of Old World and New World vultures convergently
evolved a bald head, preventing feathers from retaining material
from the vulture's diet of rotting meat, as well as helping in heat
regulation.
The American Bald Eagle is not really bald. The feathers on the
head of this bird are white, in contrast to the brown feathers of
the body. The term "bald" derives from the English word
balde, which means "white".
See also
Alopecia
areata
Trichotillomania
Baldness
treatments
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Tue, 07 Feb 2012 00:33:06 GMT
Does hair weaving really cure baldness? - Times of India
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Does hair weaving really cure baldness?Times of IndiaBaldness or loss of hair is an increasingly common phenomenon in a world riddled with triggers like stress and lifestyle imbalances. While it doesn't disturb quite a few who choose to go bald as a personal style statement, it does bother most who then ... |
Mon, 06 Feb 2012 06:58:24 GMT
Fighting baldness is an expensive pursuit - Globe and Mail
 Globe and Mail |
Fighting baldness is an expensive pursuitGlobe and Mail?Men who want to hang on to their hair have many options, including medications and surgical transplants, says Dr. Marc Avram, hair transplant surgeon and clinical professor of dermatology at Weill-Cornell Medical College in New York. |
Tue, 31 Jan 2012 22:13:08 GMT
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Mon, 30 Jan 2012 20:18:02 GMT
Why baldness is treated as fun? - News Tribe (blog)
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Why baldness is treated as fun?News Tribe (blog)By Hira Malik - Jan 26th, 2012 (No Comment) A lot is being said on maltreatment with bulky people, skinny and those with some other issue that make them 'different' but little is being talked about ill-treatment with bald people. |
Thu, 26 Jan 2012 14:00:48 GMT
Beckham won't tolerate baldness - iAfrica.com
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Beckham won't tolerate baldnessiAfrica.comDavid Beckham swears he will shave off the rest of his blonde locks if he starts going bald. The father of four told the Telegraph magazine that someone had recently asked him if he had had a hair transplant, something which he doesn't think he'll ...and more » |
Wed, 25 Jan 2012 04:41:31 GMT
David Beckham fighting baldness - Hindustan Times
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David Beckham fighting baldnessHindustan TimesDavid Beckham is worried that he is going bald like his dad Ted and is also terrified to see his children turning into adults. He is fighting baldness but has ruled out a Wayne Rooney-style hair transplant insisting he would shave off his barnet if ...and more » |
Tue, 24 Jan 2012 12:51:53 GMT
Becks fighting baldness but refuses hair transplant - TruthDive
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Becks fighting baldness but refuses hair transplantTruthDiveLondon, Jan 23 (ANI): David Beckham is worried that he is going bald like his dad Ted and is also terrified to see his children turning into adults. He is 'fighting baldness' but has ruled out a Wayne Rooney-style hair transplant ? insisting he would ...and more » |
Mon, 23 Jan 2012 15:31:35 GMT
Duncan Goodhew: 'Baldness in the late 60s wasn't something people were used to ... - The Guardian
Fri, 20 Jan 2012 23:10:08 GMT
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