Discussion in 'All Categories' started by tabasum - Nov 14th, 2011 4:33 pm. | |
tabasum
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i am having hairfall problem since two years.... please recommend me some treatment... |
re: hairfall
by Dr M.K. Gupta -
Nov 17th, 2011
9:46 pm
#1
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Dr M.K. Gupta
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Dear Tabasum Depending on your kind of hair loss, treatments are available. If a medicine is causing hair loss, your physician may be able to suggest a different medicine. Recognizing and treating contamination might help stop the hair loss. Correcting a hormone imbalance may prevent further hair loss. Medicines may also help slow or prevent the development of common baldness. One medicine, minoxidil (brand: Rogaine), is available without a prescription. It's applied to the scalp. Both men and women can use it. Another medicine, finasteride, can be obtained having a prescription. It's available in pills and is just for men. It may take up to Six months before you can tell if one of these simple medicines is working. If adequate treatment is unavailable for your type of hair loss, you may consider trying different hairstyles or wigs, hairpieces, hair weaves or artificial hair replacement. Numerous things can cause excessive hair loss. For instance, around three or four months following a disease or a major surgery, you may suddenly lose lots of hair. This hair thinning is related to the stress from the illness and is temporary. Hormonal problems might lead to hair thinning. In case your thyroid is overactive or underactive, hair may drop out. This hair loss usually could be helped by treatment thyroid disease. Hair thinning may occur if man or woman hormones, referred to as androgens and estrogens, are out of balance. Correcting the hormone imbalance may stop your hair loss. A lot of women notice hair thinning about 3 months once they have stood a baby. This loss is also related to hormones. While pregnant, high amounts of certain hormones result in the body to keep hair that will normally drop out. When the hormones go back to pre-pregnancy levels, that hair is lost and also the normal cycle of growth and loss starts again. Some medicines may cause hair thinning. This type of hair thinning improves if you quit taking the medicine. Medicines that can cause hair loss include blood thinners (also called anticoagulants), medicines employed for gout, high blood pressure or heart problems, a vitamin (if an excessive amount of is taken), oral contraceptives and antidepressants. Certain infections may cause hair thinning. Fungal infections from the scalp can cause hair thinning in children. The issue is definitely given antifungal medicines. Finally, hair loss may occur part of a fundamental disease, such as lupus or diabetes. Since hair thinning might be an early on manifestation of an illness, you should find the cause in order that it may be treatable. With regards M.K. Gupta |
re: hairfall
by Oscar -
Apr 23rd, 2012
12:31 am
#2
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Oscar
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I think, with long hair, there is a greater pobiarblity, if it snagging when combing or brushing, and some have pulled out. Even with long hair are those that get stuck on their own rather stable in the other, until you are combing, while with short hair, shed hair fall could go free and get lost and thus not counted in the hair inventory. By the way, if you nothing else to do but count the number of shed hairs have every day, you have to get out. |