Alopecia: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Michael Maddaleni (talk | contribs)
Michael Maddaleni (talk | contribs)
Line 278: Line 278:
*:* [[Stress]] the recovery is normal
*:* [[Stress]] the recovery is normal
* Treat underlying cause of alopecia
* Treat underlying cause of alopecia
== Pharmacotherapy ==
=== Acute Pharmacotherapies ===
* [[Androgenetic alopecia]]
*:* For men, oral [[finasteride]] or [[topical]] [[minoxidil]]
*:* For women, [[antiandrogens]] if [[adrenal]] [[androgens]] are increased
* [[Tinea capitus]]/[[kerion]]
*:* Oral [[antifungals]]
* [[Alopecia areata]]
*:* [[Glucocorticoids]]
*:* [[Psoralen and ultraviolet A]] ([[PUVA]])
*:* Superpotent [[steriods]]
*:* [[Cyclosporine]]
*:* Intralesional [[steriod]] [[injections]]
=== Chronic Pharmacotherapies ===
*Topical [[minoxidil]] ([[Rogaine]], generic): 
:*only [[Rx]] approved for women as well as men
:*Increases duration of [[anagen]] and enlarges miniaturized follicles
:*Mechanism unclear
*Efficacy:
:*hair counts ~5x higher than placebo with use of 5% solution (men)
:*hair counts 45% higher with use of 5% solution compared with use of 2% solution (men)
:*hair counts returned to those of placebo group within 24 weeks after discontinuation [[Rx]] (men)
:*women:  increased hair growth in 60% vs. 40% with use of 2% soln vs. placebo
:*'''Advice for patients:'''
::*1 mL bid applied to dry [[scalp]] with spray or dropper; spread lightly w/finger
::*expect decreased loss w/in 2 mos, growth w/in 4-8 mos; stable at 1-1.5 yrs
::*best results if baldness present at vertex x < 5 years and < 10 cm diameter
::*cosmetically notable growth occurs in only 30-40%
::*Rx must continue indefinitely or regrown hair will be lost
::*[[Side effect]]s = rare contact or irritant dermatitis; no change [[blood pressure]], [[heart rate]] or weight


== Acknowledgements ==
== Acknowledgements ==

Revision as of 20:50, 28 August 2012

Alopecia
Alopecia as male pattern baldness at age 40
ICD-10 L65.9
ICD-9 704.09
DiseasesDB 14765
MedlinePlus 003246
MeSH D000505

Alopecia Microchapters

Home

Patient Information

Overview

Historical Perspective

Classification

Pathophysiology

Causes

Differentiating Alopecia from other Diseases

Epidemiology and Demographics

Risk Factors

Screening

Natural History, Complications and Prognosis

Diagnosis

Diagnostic Study of Choice

History and Symptoms

Physical Examination

Laboratory Findings

Electrocardiogram

X-ray

Echocardiography and Ultrasound

CT Scan

MRI

Other Imaging Findings

Other Diagnostic Studies

Treatment

Medical Therapy

Surgery

Laser Therapy

Concealing Hair Loss

Primary Prevention

Secondary Prevention

Cost-Effectiveness of Therapy

Future or Investigational Therapies

Case Studies

Case #1

Alopecia On the Web

Most recent articles

Most cited articles

Review articles

CME Programs

Powerpoint slides

Images

American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Alopecia

All Images
X-rays
Echo & Ultrasound
CT Images
MRI

Ongoing Trials at Clinical Trials.gov

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse

NICE Guidance

FDA on Alopecia

CDC on Alopecia

Alopecia in the news

Blogs on Alopecia

Directions to Hospitals Treating Alopecia

Risk calculators and risk factors for Alopecia

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Synonyms and keywords: Atrichia; hair loss

Overview

Alopecia is the resulting condition from the loss of hair, which is termed effluvium. It should be distinguished from baldness, which is the lack of hair, including contexts where that absence is intentional. (In some cases the terms are used interchangeably, and in some conditions such as trichotillomania, where the loss of the hair is due to intentional acts, but the motive for that act is defined as a medical condition, it can be difficult to determine whether the label "alopecia" is appropriate.)

Alopecia is characterized by scarring or non-scarring. Scarring alopecia is caused by numerous dermatologic factors, including glabrous skin (non-hairy), and is very difficult to diagnose and manage. Non-scarring alopecia is characterized by the absence of visible inflammation of the skin involved.

Vocabulary

  • Anagen:growth phase, lasts 2-3 years (80-90% of follicles at any given time)
  • Catagen:involutional phase, lasts 2-3 weeks (1-3% of follicles)
  • Telogen:resting phase, lasts 3-4 months (5-10% of follicles)
  • hair released from shaft and shed at end of telogen new cycle begins
  • mature root sheath of telogen hair = “club” at proximal end
  • Terminal hairs: large shaft diameters, bulbs extend into subcutaneous fat
  • Vellus hairs:smaller in caliber and length, less pigmented
  • Indeterminate hairs:size/length between that of terminal and vellus hairs

Risk Factors

Pathophysiology & Etiology

Non Scarring
Diffuse

  • most common (30-40% of men and women)
  • Genetically determined: polygenic with variable penetrance
  • Shortening of anagen phase follicular miniaturization
  • Men: M-shaped pattern along frontal hairline (temporal loss progresses to midscalp)
  • Women: more diffuse, can be difficult to distinguish from telogen effluvium
  • Reversible loss of mature, terminal hairs (few hundred per day)
  • Stressful event (or medication) triggers transition of more anagen hairs into telogen phase
  • Diffuse hair loss peaks 3-4 months after inciting event
  • Up to 30% of hairs must be lost before cosmetically apparent
  • Anagen effluvium

Focal

  • Smooth, discrete, circular areas of complete hair loss occurring over a few weeks
  • Exclamation point hairs: hair root narrower than normal with less pigment
  • Can occur on any hair-bearing area; nails may also have proximal pitting
  • Usually reversible: regrowth occurs over several months; 90% regrow within 2 years
  • Relapse occurs in up to 1/3
  • Decreased chance of regrowth/increased risk relapse if:
  • Traction alopecia: due to hairstyles that impose chronic tension on hair (braids)
  • Hair loss most prominent in areas of greatest tension (margins)
  • Fine, vellus hairs present in areas of absent terminal hairs
  • Regrowth can occur in early disease (few months-yrs), but not in late disease (years)
  • Chemical trauma: repeated use of lye-containing straightening agents or hot oils for styling
  • Trichotillomania: bizarre, asymmetric pattern of broken hairs of varying length

Scarring

  • uncommon; hair loss is permanent
  • erythematous papules, pustules, or scaling centered around follicles
  • polytrichia = multiple hair shafts exiting a single enlarged orifice
  • eventual obliteration of follicular orifices
  • Tinea capitis
  • Central, centrifugal scarring alopecia (a.k.a. follicular degeneration syndrome, pseudopelade)
  • Symmetric involvement of central portion of scalp with outward expansion over months/yrs
  • May be associated with pustules (folliculitis decalvans)
  • Cause unknown-> emipiric Rx with steroids, antibiotics
  • Inflammation with plugged follicles, scale, abnormal scalp pigmentation
  • May have discoid lesions elsewhere on body

Diagnosis

  • Pull test: firm pull on 20-40 hairs should yield fallout of no more than 1 in 10 hairs
  • Increased # telogen hairs with depigmented proximal bulb: telogen effluvium
  • Increased # hairs with no bulb: breakage (hair fragility due to exogenous injury)
  • Anagen hairs with pigmented root: likely excessive force
  • Follicular units: number of hairs produced per follicular orifice
  • Threes = normal for ages 20-40
  • Twos = normal for ages 40-60
  • Ones = normal for ages >60
  • Voids = follicular orifices w/o hairs suggests advanced androgenetic alopecia if no scarring
  • Testing:minimal

Complete Differential Diagnosis for Alopecia

Non-Scarring Alopecia

Scarring Alopecia

Miscellaneous

  • Traction alopecia
  • Pressure alopecia
    Alopecia after extended bed rest
  • Trichotillomania (compulsion to pull out one’s own hair)

History and Symptoms

  • Age
  • Duration

Traction styling

Physical Examination

Appearance of the Patient

  • Normal or with features of scarring
  • if scalp abnormal provide clues to dx
  • Pattern: diffuse or patchy
  • Male pattern (diffuse):bitemporal recession +/or vertex loss
  • Female pattern (diffuse):coronal thinning with preserved anterior hairline
  • Patchy:with preserved hair of variable length (breakage)
  • Patient may also have nails that have a hammered brass appearance.

Laboratory Findings

Treatment

Acknowledgements

The content on this page was first contributed by: Steven Wiviott, M.D.

References

Alopecia Types - More information about alopecia and the various different types


Template:WikiDoc Sources