Palm Springs and Rancho Mirgae

Will a hair transplant change my hair texture?

October 3rd, 2011

After a hair transplant, depending on the location from where the donor hair was harvested will determine the color of the hair after it is transplanted. For instance, if you have grey hair in the back that is transplanted to the front, it will maintain the color. Yes, the texture of the hair may change after hair transplantation, due to trauma that occurs during the placement of the graft into the recipient sites. We consider the transplanted hair to be resistant to the hormonal cause of hair loss. Although the transplanted hair will fall out in about two weeks, the transplanted hair follicle is intact and new hair generally begins to grow again in about three months. This hair lives and grows indefinitely. The technique I use is the follicular-unit micrografts which provide a more natural look, permanently.

Can a hair transplant lower the hairline to minimize the appearance of a large forehead, not just fill in a receded hairline?

July 15th, 2011

Yes, that’s the beauty of follicular unit grafting. We can create a lower, natural-looking hairline through this procedure by harvesting hair from the back of your head and placing it in individual units to achieve a less visible forehead. When designing a new hairline, we take into account several factors to deliver the most aesthetically pleasing result including ethnic variations, future aging patterns and place sentinel hairs – the thin, fine hairs that naturally occur just below the hairline.

Getting to the Root of Hair Loss in Women

May 7th, 2010

If you think hair loss occurs only in men, think again. An estimated two-thirds of American women will face hair loss at some point in their lives – contributing to feelings of low self-esteem and confidence.

To understand why women lose their hair, it’s important to understand how hair grows. Generally, scalp hair grows about a half-inch per month, with each hair in a growth (or anogen) phase for two to six years. The hair then rests for one or two weeks (the catagen phase), and falls out in its telogen phase (we normally lose 50 to 100 hairs a day as part of this process). Soon, a new hair grows from the same follicle, a cycle that continues for most of our lives. At any time, about 85 percent of hair is in the growth phase.

This cycle, however, can be interrupted by hormones called androgens, which include testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT). Even though these are “male” hormones, women’s bodies produce them in small amounts. When testosterone meets up with certain enzymes in the hair cells of someone with a genetic predisposition to hair loss, it converts to DHT, which causes hair follicles to shrink and die. The result is a type of hair loss called female-pattern baldness. The medical term is androgenetic alopecia.

Androgenetic alopecia in women also can be linked to other hormone-related conditions including polycystic ovary syndrome, pregnancy, menopause, and taking certain birth-control pills.

This hereditary female-pattern baldness differs from the male version in one major way. In women, the hair loss is much more diffuse – it tends to thin all over the scalp, while a man’s hairline recedes and the crown thins, leaving a U-shaped ring of hair around the sides and back of the scalp. But it’s no less distressing for a woman, and affects an estimated 30 million American women – making it the most common cause of female hair loss.

Telogen effluvium is the second-most common type of hair loss I see in my practice. When a woman’s body goes through a traumatic experience – such as childbirth, major surgery, an emotional shock or severe stress – it can cause the 85 percent of hair that’s in the growth phase to shift all at once into the shedding phase. Crash dieting, with too little protein or iron, can also cause telogen effluvium. Once the stressful situation resolves – or nutrition improves – the hair loss usually does, too.

Thyroid disorders are another potential cause of hair loss – and women are five to eight times more likely than men to have thyroid disease. Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and Graves’ disease are two forms of autoimmune thyroid disorders in which hair loss is often seen.

There also is an autoimmune skin disease called alopecia areata that causes hair loss. It usually starts with small, round and smooth patches on the scalp and can progress to other parts of the body.

In addition, certain medications can contribute to hair loss. These include oral corticosteroids (like prednisone), and some antacids, blood thinners, NSAIDs, beta blockers and antidepressants.

Finally, the way you treat your hair can affect whether it stays on your head. Traction alopecia is a condition often experienced by women who wear tight braids or constantly pull their hair back in tight ponytails, damaging the hair follicle and preventing new hair growth in certain areas of the scalp. Trichotillomania – hair loss caused by compulsive twisting or pulling of the hair until it breaks off – affects as many as 10 million Americans, most of them women. And over-processing with chemical dyes, bleaching, perms and straightening processes can cause the hair shaft to break. When the harsh treatment has stopped, however, the hair usually grows back.

With so many potential culprits, it can take some detective work to get to the root of what’s causing a woman to lose her hair. And it’s not uncommon for there to be more than one reason for her hair loss. Dermatologists have specialized expertise in diagnosing and treating conditions that affect the skin, nails and hair, so we’re best able to diagnose the underlying cause – or causes – of hair loss. And an accurate diagnosis and timely treatment offer the best chance for successful, healthy regrowth. For female-pattern baldness, in particular, having a full and healthy head of hair again can be a reality with today’s advances in hair transplantation and restoration.

Timothy Jochen, MD, is a board-certified dermatologist with special expertise in hair transplantation and restoration surgery and an associate clinical professor of dermatology at the University of Southern California. He is a member of the International Society of Hair Restoration (ISHRS). To learn more, visit www.contourderm.com.