Have any of you guys found a successful dosage that doesn’t give you puffy face, fat belly etc while still being effective for hair growth?
If you are getting these side effects, either the dose is too high or you should not be on this drug. Speak with your doctor
Do fin or min+fin work well for diffused thinners? Also please give advice on regimens that have worked for you if you’re a diffused thinner. I am 18 years old.
Diffuse thinning has many causes. You need a good examination by a hair doctor that understands hair loss and hair thinning. If it is part of the genetic hair loss that you inherited, then finasteride and minoxidil are the staples of treatment.
So I’m 6 months into my finasteride 1mg a day and minoxidil 5% twice daily treatment. The first few months were good, I had an initial shedding period that I expected and then the shedding stopped. However now it’s starting to shed more and it’s begun to have me concerned
Hair loss is a progressive process and just because you are now treating it and it worked for 6 months, it doesn’t mean that the hair loss just will not accelerate while you are on treatment. Speak with your hair doctor about it.
I’ve noticed that my dad has had the same semi-receded hair line for like the last 15 years. It has only slightly thinned out on the top since.
We are born with a patterned hair loss (inherited from family) that we will reach and then stabilize. That is most likely why your dad’s patterned hair loss is stable. Let’s stay that he had a Norwood 4A pattern genetically programmed, that means he, most likely, will never progress further to a Norwood Class 6 or 7 pattern.
Hair system for someone who still has hair but diffused thinning like me, will they work well?
Hair systems work well, but they almost always accelerate the hair loss because of the various attachments that are used. Men who use hair systems find that they get balder by the number of years they use them.
Have your patients reported to you that their life improved was improved from getting a hair transplant (E.g. Confidence, more time etc)? I’m thinking about getting it done and I’m really worried about the first day travelling home.
Almost all of my hair transplant patient regret not doing it earlier. The average age for a hair transplant in my practice is mid-thirties. The older the man is, the more they regret not getting a hair transplant and living with balding. Almost 100% tell me hair transplants were a life changing process. I started doing large session transplants in 1991 with follicular units back then. I never did a ‘plug’ surgery
Nice post on your blog. I’ve always wondered why some people’s HT don’t always take.Questions this brings up:– should one go to a dermatology clinic instead of a doc to get this done?– perhaps in the same way one can take fin to mitigate shockloss, would it be wise to take corticosteroid pills say leading up to and after a HT?Just trying to gauge how to put this information into practical use :-DThanks again! Love your work!
This patient is referring to the post: https://baldingblog.com/?s=ishrs+pearl. All good hair transplant surgeons should know how to do trichoscopy and perform it in their offices to analyze the hair and scalp. Such an examination will pick up diseases or suspicion of diseases like LPP or FFA. Steroids should not be taken blindly.
Hello doctor, I was wondering if you could help me with a conundrum I’m thinking about: I see some people start taking fin for a solid 6 months to a year, see if hair loss stabilizes, and then are advising people to take min. My derm prescribed me a compounded fin / min topical , and I’m a little worried about taking fin/ min together in case I stop just the min, and want to continue taking the fin. Would it be wise in any instance to insist on taking both at once, or would taking fin first then waiting for min always be a safe result?
Both may work better in many men (the majority of men respond to oral minoxidil but only 40% will respond to the topical form). These two drugs act differently, so taking them both gives you the best shot at addressing the hair loss
Not a 3A, of course is not balding. A Norwood 3 might be balding. That’s a mature hairline means. A presentable hairline that is basically the final pattern of hair loss for a man.
The maturing hairline is not balding. The Norwood scale at a 1 or 2 show some form of the juvenile/maturing hairline. Balding starts when corner recession appears when the hairline takes on a gentle V shape as in a Class 3 pattern where the corners and possibly the entire hairline rises up. It can also be detected when or if crown thinning appears. The correct incidence of balding in the male population is about 50% of men believed to have inherited some form of balding in their lifetime. My grandfather died at 102 and he had his 5 year old hairline when he died. His hairline never went through maturation. Bill Clinton is another example of a mature male who kept their juvenile hairline.
Dr. Christine Shaver and other dermatologists are picking up diseases of the scalp in young balding men. These men present with itching, inflammation and hair loss. Upon biopsies taken by Dr Shaver, she identifies about one young male patient each week with a condition called Lichen Planopilaris or Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia, both autoimmune diseases of the scalp. In some men who eventually get a hair transplant, the hair transplant is likely to be rejected by the body. It may also reduce the growth or prevent growth in a hair transplant. If you have itching and inflammation, seek out a dermatologist and have two biopsies, one in the frontal where the inflammation and the itchiness is most prevalent and then a second biopsy from the Donor area in the back of the head. A biopsy read by an expert, will make the diagnosis and then special treatments are required. Catching it early is critical for everyone who has these diseases.
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