What can be done?
In cases of hair loss that stress, medication, or pregnancy, hair growth will
return to normal as soon as the condition causing the hair loss ceases to
exist. When hair loss is caused by scalp disorders or vitamin deficiencies,
these conditions can be corrected with proper therapies, many which can be
obtained without a prescription.
However, for the vast majority of women suffering from female
pattern baldness (FPB), the answers and corresponding solutions
are not as easy to come by.
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"The overwhelming majority
of
women suffer from what is known as androgenic hair loss. This
is caused by hormones." |
Topical Lotions
There are many topical lotions sold by beauty salons across the country, specifically
for women with thinning hair. For many women, this is the first attempt at correcting
their excessive hair loss. However, for women with androgenic hair loss (female
pattern baldness), lotions and creams simply will not work.
Drug Therapy
Minoxidil has now been approved for use by women in formulations containing
2% of the drug. Now sold as an over-the-counter product, minoxidil has been
approved by the FDA as a hair loss cessation/hair growing drug. However,
minoxidil has only been shown to grow hair on the crown, not in the frontal
hairline. The hair that minoxidil can grow, even in the crown is usually
hair that is not considered "cosmetically acceptable", meaning
hair that will not grow long and healthy enough to cover the scalp.
As for minoxidil's ability to stop hair loss, the success
rate varies widely from individual to individual. In most cases,
the hair loss still continues but will sometimes do so at a
lesser rate. In all cases, once minoxidil use is stopped, hair
loss returns to its original levels; any hair growth achieved
will also cease.
Transplants
Transplants are now being preformed by doctors on women patients. Hair transplants
have been vastly improved in the past ten years, and no longer produced the "row
of corn" appearance that was the case in the days of "hair plugs".
It must be noted that transplants do not create new hair. They simply move hair
from the back of the scalp (the donor area) to the desired areas of the scalp
where there is hair loss. The amount of hair on the scalp remains the same. It
is just rearranged. In order for transplants to be successful, the patient must
have enough hair in the donor area to cover the thin or the bald areas. If enough
donor hair can't be harvested, significant cosmetic coverage will not be achieved
in thin or bald areas. Another consideration is future hair loss: since your
natural hair continues to fall out, the question then becomes, will there be
enough donor hair to eventually cover the balding areas without leaving the donor
area denude of hair too?
The reason that transplants are more widely touted for men and not women has
to do with the amount of hair that can be harvested. Both men and women have
the same number of hairs on their scalps, but in men, it is more acceptable for
light coverage to be the result - it's better for a man to be thinning than bald,
is the theory. For women, thin hair that makes her look like she is going bald
is rarely acceptable.
Wigs
Standard machine-made wigs offer a number of advantages. They provide full coverage
of the thinning areas, for one. And unlike many so-called women's hair loss
solutions, they're guaranteed to work.
But machine-made wigs are not for everyone. The less expensive ones that use
synthetic hair can be less than natural looking. Machine made wigs can also be
hot and cumbersome. For women with an active lifestyle - especially women who
exercise and engage in other physical activities - wigs can be limiting: you
certainly can't swim in them, and sunning or being intimate can be compromised
by a wig's limitations. And of course, they are not part of you; at night, they
generally come off.
For some women, the advantages far outweigh the disadvantages. For other women,
wigs are not a viable solution. It depends on lifestyle, your expectations, and
the trade-offs you're willing to accept. In other words, whether or not to wear
a wig is an intensely personal decision.
Hair Augmentation
There are many different methods of women's hair restoration that fall under
the general heading "hair augmentation". Some of these methods
rival wigs, for the most part. Other are far different.
By definition, hair augmentation refers to the process of adding to a women's
existing hair, rather than covering it up as a wig would. If this is done in
such a manner that is results in the hair becoming "permanently" part
of the scalp, it offers women a plethora of advantages over other solutions.
The idea of augmentation was largely derived from yesterday's "hair weaves".
The internet was not to cover the entire scalp, but only to add hair where needed.
However, weaves had so many disadvantages that other methods were created to
overcome them: thus, the beginnings of modern day hair augmentation. However,
just like wigs and weaves, there are many different types of hair augmentation,
some much better than others.
The idea of augmentation was largely derived from yesterday's "hair weaves".
The internet was not to cover the entire scalp, but only to add hair where needed.
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