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Sunday, March 28, 2010

hair loss treatment





Gbex says: It is a fact that hair loss or alopecia, which is the medical description of the loss of hair from the head or body, to the extent of baldness, creates a real trouble mostly in males. Unlike the common aesthetic depilation of body hair, alopecia tends to be involuntary and unwelcome, e.g., androgenic alopecia.

However, it may also be caused by a psychological compulsion to pull out one's own hair (trichotillomania) or the unforeseen consequences of voluntary hairstyling routines (mechanical "traction alopecia" from excessively tight ponytails or braids, or burns to the scalp from caustic hair relaxer solutions or hot hair irons).

In some cases, alopecia is an indication of an underlying medical concern, such as iron deficiency.

When hair loss occurs in only one section, it is known as alopecia areata. Alopecia universalis is when complete hair loss on the body occurs, similar to how hair loss associated with chemotherapy sometimes affects the entire body.

It is estimated that just less than half of men are affected by male pattern baldness by age 50, baldness treatments are estimated to be a billion dollar per year industry. Since the 80s, drug therapy has increasingly become a realistic management option for baldness for men and women like the use of provilus. Increased understanding of the role of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in male and female pattern baldness has led to targeted intervention to prevent this hormone from acting on receptors in the scalp.

Causes of hair loss can be:
-Androgenic alopecia (Male pattern baldness)
-Fungal infection such as "black dot" tinea or tinea capitis
Chemical breakage such as over processing, or frequent use of chemical relaxer
-Heat damage as from repeated hot comb use
-Chronic exposure to traction on hair shaft such as Traction alopecia
-Compulsive hair pulling such as trichotillomania
-Hyperthyroidism or Hypothyroidism
-Iron deficiency
-Telogen effluvium resulting from physical or psychological stress
-Hereditary disorder of the hair shaft or genodermatoses
-Secondary syphilis can cause "moth eaten hairloss"
-Discoid lupus erythematosus or chronic cutanous lupus erythematosus
-Lichenplanopilaris
-Pseudopelade of Brocq
-Tufted folliculitis
-Dissecting cellulitis
-Alopecia mucinosa
-Keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans
-Adverse effect from certain drugs such as chemotherapy
-Radiation therapy

These causes are in one way or the other contributing to hair damage and loss that need to be treated by the rightful treatments like provilus.

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