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Baldness (formally alopecia) is the state of
lacking hair where it usually would grow, especially on
the head. The most common form of baldness is a
progressive hair-thinning condition that occurs in adult
humans and other primate species.
Male pattern
baldness is thought to occur in varying forms in about
50% of adult males. It is characterized by hair receding
from the lateral sides of the forehead, known as
"receding hairline" or "receding brow." An additional bald
patch may develop on top (vertex). The trigger for
this type of baldness, which is also known as
androgenic alopecia, is currently believed to be
5-alpha reductase, an enzyme that converts the hormone
testosterone into dihydrotestosterone (DHT), which, in
genetically-prone hairs on the scalp, inhibits hair
growth. Onset of hair loss sometimes begins as early as
end of puberty, and is mostly genetically determined. Male
pattern baldness is classified on the Hamilton-Norwood
scale I-VIII.
Female pattern baldness, in which the midline
parting of the hair appears broadened, is less common. It
is believed to result from a decrease in estrogen, a
hormone that normally counteracts the balding effect of
testosterone, which normally occurs in women's blood.
Female pattern baldness is being classified on the Ludwig
scale I-III.
There are several other kinds of baldness. Traction
alopecia is most commonly found in women with ponytails or
cornrows that pull on their hair with excessive force.
Traumas such as chemotherapy, childbirth, major surgery,
poisoning, and severe stress may cause a hair loss
condition known as telogen effluvium. Some mycotic
infections can cause massive hair loss. Alopecia areata is
an autoimmune disorder also known as "spot baldness" that
can result in hair loss ranging from just one location (Alopecia
areata monolocularis) to every hair on the entire body
(Alopecia areata universalis).
Approaches to baldness
The psychological implications for individuals
experiencing hair loss vary widely. There can be a general
societal anxiety surrounding the process of hair loss, but
some individuals view it as nature taking its course.
Some balding men may feel proud of their baldness,
feeling a kindred relationship with famous charismatic
bald film
actors such as
Yul Brynner,
Telly Savalas and
Patrick Stewart, who have been considered
masculine and handsome in part because of their most
obvious distinguishing feature.
Preventing and reversing hair loss
It is easier to prevent the aging and falling out of
healthy hairs than to regrow hair in
follicles that are already dormant. However, there are
products that have good success rates with maintenance and
regrowth, including the scientifically proven
Propecia,
Rogaine, and
Tricomin. The prospective treatment of hair
multiplication/hair cloning, which extracts
self-replenishing follicle stem cells, multiples them many
times over in the lab, and microinjects them into the
scalp, has been shown to work in mice, and is currently
under development, expected by some scientists to be
available to the public in 2009-2015. Subsequent versions
of the treatment are expected by some scientists to be
able to cause these follicle stem cells to simply signal
the surrounding hair follicles to rejuvenate.
Interestingly,
placebo treatments in studies often have reasonable
success rates, though not as high as the products being
tested, and even similar side-effects as the products. For
example, in Finasteride (propecia) studies, the percent of
patients with any drug-related sexual adverse experience
was 3.8% compared with 2.0% in the placebo group.
Proponents of alternative therapies believe that the
majority of cases of hair loss that progress despite
treatments do so because the people believe no such cure
can occur. In this view, this belief, which is prevailing
in the modern civilised world and continuously reinforced
by medical science, is the main obstacle for effectively
finding and applying a cure.
Non-pharmacological measures
Hair transplant
Surgery is another method of reversing hair loss and
baldness, although it may be considered an extreme
measure. The surgical methods used include
hair transplants, where patches of skin with hair are
moved from one part of the head to another. Another method
is
scalp reduction, where parts of the scalp are removed,
the skin is stretched over the area that had been removed,
and everything is stitched back together. Hair transplants
generally cause scarring, sometimes severe, which may be
especially visible if hair loss continues over the rest of
the scalp.
Speculative treatments
Stem cells
Stem cells have been discovered in hair follicles and
some researchers predict research on these follicle stem
cells may lead to successes in treating baldness through
hair multiplication within three or four years (as
of November 2004). This treatment is expected to initially
work through taking stem cells from existing follicles,
multiplying them in cultures, and implanting the new
follicles into the scalp. Later treatments may be able to
simply signal follicle stem cells to transmit chemical
signals to nearby follicle cells which have shrunk during
the aging process, which respond to these signals by
regenerating and once again making healthy hair.
Concealing hair loss
One method of hiding hair loss is the comb-over,
which involves restyling the remaining hair to cover the
balding area. It is usually a temporary solution, useful
only while the area of hair loss is small. As the hair
loss increases, a comb-over becomes less effective.
Another method is to wear a hairpiece - a wig
or
toupee. The wig is a layer of artificial or natural
hair made to resemble a typical hair style. In most cases
the hair is artificial. Wigs vary widely in quality and
cost. The best wigs - those that look like real hair -
cost up to tens of thousands of dollars. Organizations
such as
Locks of Love (http://www.locksoflove.org/)
and
Wigs for Kids (http://www.wigsforkids.org/)
collect individuals' donations of their own natural hair
to be made into wigs for young
cancer patients who have lost their hair due to
chemotherapy or other cancer treatment.
Embracing baldness
Of course, instead of concealing hair loss, one may
embrace it. Many celebrities and athletes shave their
heads. The
St. Baldrick's Foundation (http://www.stbaldricks.org/)
spreads the message of baldness by shaving the heads of
adults to raise money for curing childhood cancer, which
often causes children to lose their hair. See
Head shaving.
Common baldness myths
There are many myths regarding the possible causes of
baldness and its relationship with one's
virility, intelligence, ethnicity, job,
social class, wealth etc. Most of them can be
dismissed by the existence of many counterexamples or by a
lack of sufficient scientific research.
Some of these myths are:
- "Intellectual activity or psychological problems can
cause baldness."
This myth probably was inspired by the fact that the
human
brain is located inside the skull, very close and just
below where hair grows, and so it was thought that the use
and abuse as well as
mental diseases could have negative effect on hair
growth and number.
This is sometimes used as a
stereotype in
movies, where the more intellectual or rather
frustrated characters are most usually portrayed as bald
and generally unattractive, as opposed to the main
characters which are usually portrayed as attractive, fit,
mentally stable and generally with no apparent hair
problems.
This same myth normally extends to considering people
having intellectual jobs more prone to baldness problems
compared to manual laborers, sometimes further extending
the myth to male
college or
university
students when compared to
workers of the same age. The myth is suspect because
counterexamples can be found in any case.
- "Baldness can be caused by emotional stress, sexual
frustration etc."
While emotional
stress can have a part in causing baldness, again it
is easy to find counterexamples like non-frustrated and
non-stressed people with hair loss problems as well as
stressed and/or frustrated people with no hair loss
problem at all. This myth also suggests that a
vicious circle between hair loss and emotional
stress/sexual frustration can take place, although only
one part of it can be scientifically explained (hair loss
causing low esteem and then frustration, but not vice
versa).
- "Bald men are more "virile" or sexually active than
others."
This myth probably stems from the fact that some forms
of baldness in some predisposed individuals are caused by
androgens, and removal of androgens (by
castration) prevents baldness or stops it from
progressing further. Yet counterexamples can be found,
like men with perfect hairlines and similar levels of
androgens or men with sensitivity to androgens causing
hair loss but which are not very sexually active.
- "Shaving hair makes it grow back stronger"
Proposed as a popular remedy against baldness, it's
very probably just an illusion similar to the one
perceived after
shaving one's beard or mustache. Shaving one's head
doesn't increase the number of healthy hair present on the
scalp, and, when the remaining hair has grown a few
millimeters, no enhancement in thickness or overall
quality can be observed.
- "Some human
races or
ethnic groups are less prone to baldness problems
then others."
It is true that by observing many pictures of men of
European descent and then comparing them to pictures of
men of
Asian or
American Indian descent it is very likely that a
random observer will deduce that baldness problems seem to
be much more frequent among the "European" group than in
the "Asian" one.
Similar observations can be done regarding the people
living in most Western countries when compared to people
living in "underdeveloped" or
Third World countries, but lacking any official
anthropological,
medical and
scientific research to back them up, such observations
degenerate into a racial/social
stereotype.
A very similar
stereotype exists even between the various European
ethnic groups, when comparing people of
Southern European descent with those of
Northern European,
Germanic or
Slavic origins, with the stereotype summarily
describing the "Southern Europeans" as darker-skinned,
with more body hair, with the women more prone to
cellulite problems and the men more prone to baldness,
a stereotype probably developed under times of war
or
diplomatic tensions between European countries.
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