How common is hair loss in men?
The average person sheds more
than a hundred hairs per day. This is no real cause for concern, as long as
your body is replenishing these losses. When hair loss begins to
exceed these thresholds, then it is time to worry.
Alopecia is a chronic inflammatory condition
affecting hair follicles, resulting in discrete areas of hair loss. The
separate areas may coalesce to form larger areas. The most commonly affected
site is the scalp, but in rare cases the whole body, including pubic hair, may
be affected. This is called alopecia universalis.
Alopecia occurs in
approximately one per 1000 persons, affecting men and women equally. Most
patients are below the age of 30 at the outset. The majority of cases resolve
spontaneously, though recurrence is common.
Male pattern
baldness, the most common form of alopecia, has been the source of
emotional distress for men over the centuries.
Man's obsession with hair dates
back to 3500 BC. From ancient biblical times to the Roman period, the specter
of male pattern baldness has reared its ugly head. Julius Caesar was
preoccupied with his hair loss and grew his hair long in the back and combed it
all forward. He also wore laurel wreaths to camouflage his baldness.
Hippocrates, the father of
Medicine made a potion for hair loss consisting of opium, horseradish, pigeon
droppings, beetroot; spices and many other exotic ingredients (it didn’t work).
He observed that eunuchs
(sexually immature men) never became bald. 2400 years later, researchers at
Duke's University showed the association between the male hormone testosterone
and male pattern baldness.
Baldness affects the scalp in a
"horse shoe" pattern on the top of the head. In the majority of
cases, the sides of the head is never lost. In approximately 1-2% of cases, the
condition is spread to the entire scalp (called alopecia totalis).
What causes baldness?
There is no single
definite-known cause for alopecia, but the most accepted explanation is that it
is an auto-immune condition. Antibodies to hair follicles are frequently
present in affected persons: these attack and temporarily damage the follicles,
preventing further hair growth.
There is an association with
other auto-immune diseases, such as thryoiditis, vitiligo and pernicious
anaemia.
Up to 20% of patients have a
family history of alopecia, which suggests a genetic predisposition. You may
even have this tendency despite the fact that your parents have full heads of
hair - this is due to a process known as spontaneous mutation, whereby the
genetic information changes at conception.
Regardless of the genetic or
auto-immune status, it is possible that a triggering event is required to
initiate the episode of alopecia.
Trigger
factors which have been proposed include:
·
drugs
·
vaccination
·
infections
·
burns
·
radiation therapy
·
surgery
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