Tuesday, July 5, 2011

hair care article 25

This disease most often develops in adolescents and young adults, after twenty years, as well as children and the elderly.
Women suffer more than men (presumably, may be only 7% of patients who completely lose their hair).
This phenomenon may be periodic (especially in spring and autumn).

Features:
- Illness is the result of immune system disorders
- The immune system attacks and destroys its own cells, mistaking them as "foreign" and there is hair loss.
 - Hair follicles become very small.
- This disease is not contagious.



The disease
- The disease is not completely predictable.
- This disease may affect only one part of the body, usually the head or other body parts with her hair.
- The head can be as small isolated areas of hair loss and complete loss of hair.
- Restoration of hair growth can occur spontaneously even without treatment.
- It may be that the hair will grow back gray.
- But it may happen again and my hair loss.
- For some people, along with hair loss, may be affected and the nails.
- It is a lot of stress and discomfort.
- But it does not affect the overall health of the patient.

Androgenetic Alopecia Women
- This type of hair loss is often accompanied by abnormal secretion of the hormone. The most frequently observed deficiency of estrogen, progesterone, or elevated levels of adrenal androgens.

Male pattern androgenetic alopecia
- Male pattern baldness is the most common form of baldness and affects approximately 60% of men older than 50 years. This type of hair loss often runs in families.

Male androgenetic alopecia

- Hair loss is largely dependent on the sensitivity of hair follicles to androgens
- Frequently coexists seborrhea of ??the scalp

Depending on the speed of change can be identified
- Severe forms - from the age of 16-18 years of age and progresses rapidly
- Severe middle - start at the age of 20-23 years
- The form of light - from roughly 40 years

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