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Library of Congress Cataloging
in Publication Data:
Sheen, Mary 1966-
Fighting Hair Loss /by Mary Sheen, MD p. cm. 97-090157
Copyrights © 1993-2006 USA Library Publishing, Inc. |
Part Three
Hair Loss, Men and Women
By far the most common form of hair loss is determined by our genes and hormones: Also
known as androgen-dependent, androgenic, or genetic hair loss. It is the largest single
type of recognizable alopecia to affect both men and women. It is estimated that around
30% of Caucasian females are affected before menopause. Other commonly used names for
genetic hair loss include common baldness, diffuse hair loss, male or female pattern
baldness.
1. Male Pattern Baldness (MPB)
Signs and Symptoms
· Receding hairline
· Moderate to extensive loss of hair, especially on the crown
2. Female pattern Baldness (FPB)
Signs and Symptoms
· General thinning of hair all over the head
· Moderate loss of hair on the crown or at hairline
MPB is the hair loss most frequently encountered. It usually starts with the hair at
the temples, which gradually recedes to form an "M" shape. You also may find
your hair is finer and does not grow as long as it once did. The hair on the crown of your
head begins to thin out and eventually at the top points of the "M" meet the
thinned spot on your crown. Over time, you are left with a horse-shoe pattern of hair
around the sides of your head. Any remaining hair in the balding areas usually manifests
some miniaturization - it is thinner and grows at a below-normal rate, changing from long,
thick, coarse, pigmented hair into fine, unpigmented sprouts.
Female pattern baldness usually begins about age 30, becomes noticeable around age 40,
and may be even more noticeable after menopause. Female hair loss is usually an overall
thinning -- two hairs where five used to be--rather than a bald area on top of the head,
though women may have a receding hairline, too. It's thought that about 20 million
American women have such hair loss. As in males, hair follicles simply shut down, with
hormones playing some role in the process.
A receding hairline reflects age, but not necessarily great age, since some men start
balding quite young. With the spurt in androgen secretion at puberty, the hairline moves
back a little in 96 per cent of boys and 80 per cent of girls. Most boys continue to shed
hair as they mature and, if baldness runs in the family, lose increasing amounts. By age
35 to 40, two thirds of Caucasian men are noticeably bald. The loss may begin at age 20,
then stop, only to start up again a few years later. Since this type of baldness is
largely hereditary, a man can usually, although not always, predict the extent of his
future baldness by examining family portraits. About 50 per cent of children with a
balding parent of either sex will inherit the dominant baldness gene.
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