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HairCited

Therapeutic approaches to the management of common baldness.

M Sommer, C Wilson
Review International journal of clinical practice 1999 16 citations
PubMed
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Study Design

Study Type
Review
Population
critically ill patients
Intervention
Therapeutic approaches to the management of common baldness. None
Comparator
None
Primary Outcome
hair outcomes
Effect Direction
Mixed
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Common baldness or androgenetic alopecia is a universal problem, having affected both sexes of all races to different extents for as long as mankind has existed. The progressive androgen dependent hair loss follows specific patterns and is a physiological process, which may take on disease quality due to psychosocial compontents. These should be taken into consideration when discussing the several treatment options available, particularly as a cure cannot be offered. Cosmetic measures range from back-combing over perms to hairpieces and wigs. Medical therapies include systemic antiandrogens and topical minoxidil; surgical options comprise follicular transplantation, scalp reduction and rotation. Before starting treatment, however, careful consideration should be given to the differential diagnosis which includes drug-induced hair thinning, anagen effluvium, diffuse alopecia areata, metabolic disturbances, nutritional deficiencies and acute as well as chronic telogen effluvium.

TL;DR

Before starting treatment, careful consideration should be given to the differential diagnosis which includes drug‐induced hair thinning, anagen effluvium, diffuse alopecia areata, metabolic disturbances, nutritional deficiencies and acute as well as chronic telogen effLUvium.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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