Alopecia medical therapy
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Medical Therapy
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
- 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 effects = rare contact or irritant dermatitis; no change blood pressure, heart rate or weight
References