I’m Taking Finasteride — What Medical Check-ups Should I Have Done Regularly?
I have two questions if I may:
I take Proscar and split it in to 5 pieces for my intake of finasteride to combat hair loss. When I do take it is only 1 piece per day which equates to 1mg I believe is what propecia pills are made to. However, I sometimes take a piece every 2 days or every 3 days – so it is quite a big gap between than what most people are told to take daily. I have been doing this for 5 years now and have a very good coverage.
Prior to taking proscar I was extremely paranoid as I had very noticeable thinning on my scalp, and would obsess about it every day to the point where it got me very depressed. Out of my family on both sides, only my dad and his brother were the very first to experience balding in the family chain, so I was convinced I would continue this after seeing my thinning. I saw are Tricologist and was recommended finasteride. After taking the drug and seeing great improvements after a month I no longer worried about it and my hair started to grow back. My hair on the scalp does feel thinner than the front but is no way noticeable to anyone else but me.
Do you think my stress levels were the cause of my original hair loss? I’m too worried to stop though in case it resumes.
My second question is what medical checks should one have and at what regularity for taking this drug? I’ve read that using proscar may increase the risk in developing prostate cancer?
Thank you for your informative website
If you saw significant improvement from taking finasteride, then I would assume that you had/have genetic hair loss and the drug was appropriately prescribed. At 1 month, the only benefit a person would see would be a reduction on hair shedding. In a person without genetic hair loss taking this drug, nothing will be seen and the normal hair cycling (100 hairs lost per day) should not change. Stress can accelerate the balding/thinning process, but I don’t know if your loss was purely stress related, or a combination of genetics and stress. That is something your doctor should’ve considered before prescribing the medication.
With regard to your prostate, if you are under the age of 40, you should not have prostate problems such as trouble urinating. A good doctor can provide a rectal exam, where the doctor can feel your prostate (not necessary without symptoms) or colon/rectal cancer (very rare in men under 30). There’s no specific evidence that I’ve seen which shows taking the low dose finasteride for treating hair loss poses a prostate cancer risk. I’ve written more about that here.
Reader Comments0
Share this entry
Leave a Comment
Want to join the discussion? Feel free to contribute! Note: We do not tolerate offensive language or personal attacks to other readers. Marketing links or commercial advertisements will be deleted.