What
Causes Hair Loss?
Why do some men keep
their hair well into old age while others begin losing their hair
at a young age?
A Genetic
Problem?
For most men who are losing their hair before they'd like to, the
answer is genetic. Hair loss, like eye color, is an inherited trait.
While you were still forming in the womb, your hair follicles were
being genetically coded. If genes responsible for hair loss were
present, they made the hair follicles on top of your head sensitive
to the hormone dihydrotestosterone, or DHT. These follicles were
then predisposed to begin shrinking when you reached adulthood.
Unfortunately, once this genetic process begins, it will continue
throughout your lifetime. As the hairs produced by your ever-shrinking
follicles become finer and finer, they will begin failing to grow
to normal length. And what is first noticed as "thinning hair"
or a "receding hairline" progresses to baldness when the
shrinking follicles finally stop producing any hair at all.
Popular
Misconceptions
For many years our
schools have taught — quite erroneously — that hair loss is always
inherited from the mother's father. Medical science now knows that
baldness genes are passed down from both sides of the family. They
also can skip generations, and are utterly random in terms of which
siblings they will affect; it is quite common for a man keep a full
head of hair while his brother goes bald in his twenties.
How Important
Is Hair Care?
Contrary to common
belief, hair loss is not caused by a failure to take good care of
your hair. Consumers waste millions of dollars on shampoos and phony,
non-FDA approved treatments. (Only two medications, Rogaine and
Propecia, have ever been approved by the FDA to treat hair loss.)
We have counseled too many men who held themselves responsible for
their hair loss. It is important to understand that with very few
exceptions our hair follicles are going to live or die by their
genetic coding — and nothing else.
Medical science is still searching for a complete understanding
of the biochemical processes that occur within our hair follicles.
Click here
to learn more about the science behind hair loss and what you can
do about it.
|