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Alopecia (hair loss)
  Alopecia Areata
 Signs, symptoms, indicators
 Treatment recommendations
 


Alopecia areata is the name for a condition in which round patches of hair loss appear suddenly. The hair-growing tissue is attacked by the patient's own immune cells for unknown reasons. There are three stages: first, there is sudden hair loss, then the patches of hair loss enlarge, and last, new hair grows back. This process takes months, sometimes more than a year, but rarely does the hair never grow back. Causes & Development


It isn't understood why the immune cells attack the hair-growing tissue. Alopecia areata is not contagious, not caused by foods, is not the result of nervousness and sometimes runs in families.

Treatment & Prevention
No fully effective treatments are available.

Conventional medicine uses cortisone injections to stimulate hair regrowth. Twenty to thirty injections per patch are required once a month. The injections are uncomfortable and some patients do not respond to cortisone or any treatment.





Signs, symptoms & indicators of Alopecia (hair loss):
Symptoms - Nails  Blue and/black/ brown fingernails

Recommendations and treatments for Alopecia (hair loss):
Devices and Appliances  Ultraviolet Light Therapy

Drug

  Corticosteroids
 Topical corticosteroids (medium to very high potency) or subcutaneous steroid injection.


KEY
Weak or unproven link
May do some good
Likely to help


GLOSSARY

Alopecia
Loss of hair.

Corticosteroid (Corticosteroids)
Steroid hormone produced by the adrenal cortex.

Steroid (Steroids)
Any of a large number of hormonal substances with a similar basic chemical structure containing a 17-carbon 14-ring system and including the sterols and various hormones and glycosides.

Subcutaneous (Subdermal)
Below the surface of the skin. Subdermal: Below the surface of the skin, and below subcutaneous, but definitely higher up than the muscles.

Topical
Most commonly 'topical application': Administration to the skin.




Last updated: Apr 13, 2008


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