Female hair loss, while it affects fewer women than its male counterpart, can be intensely distressing. New transplant techniques are offering the first viable solution to that distress.
The
misery caused by female hair loss is
of a much greater magnitude than that occasioned by its male counterpart.
There’s something about female hair that is tied in with a very old social view
of how women “should” look – which means that women who suffer a loss of hair
often feel that they have lost their femininity.
The
most common type of female baldness, Androgenetic alopecia, is the exact same
sort of hair loss experienced by most balding males. Androgenetic alopecia
happens when the scalp or hair follicles display an inherited reaction to the
presence of androgens (male hormones) in the glandular secretions on the head,
or the skin of the scalp. That’s why female
hair loss is less common than its male equivalent: women have androgens as
well as men, but obviously men, being male, have more.
When
a man loses hair through this inherited “allergy”, he tends to do so in a
uniform pattern, with hair receding from the forehead to the top of the scalp.
Unfortunately, women suffering from the same condition lose hair all over the
head – i.e., they go bald, rather than displaying a receding hair line.
Traditionally,
treatments that deal with loss of hair in women have been lengthy, often
extremely painful, and at best only slightly successful. Normal hair
replacement treatments have until recently centred on the practice of removing
whole strips of skin and hair from a non-balding area, which are then grafted
onto the target site. Female hair loss
sufferers undergoing this kind of treatment often experience weeks of
post-operation swelling, evidence a high risk of infection, and in many cases
find that the transplanted hair falls out once the swelling has gone down. Even
successful transplants like this don’t really work – the transplanted hair, if
it seeds, tends to grow in a direction similar to the one it grew in before it
was moved. That can make a woman who has had old style hair transplants look as
though she is wearing a pretty poor wig.
There
are new hair replacement technologies, though, that are starting to show
significant breakthroughs in the fight against female hair loss. FT, or Follicular Transfer, is a process that
involves implanting individual hairs, chosen for their natural growth direction.
In other words, hand-picked donor hairs that will mimic the normal growth of
the hair that has been lost.
FT
is a far less savage method of hair transplant – no skin grafts, negligible
post-operation swelling and a greatly reduced risk of infection. That makes it
about as serious an operation as having a tooth pulled: whereas skin grafting
methods of hair transplant are so shocking to the body that they are classed as
invasive surgery.
The
suffering caused by female hair loss,
then, is rapidly becoming unnecessary. Where previously women were forced
either to undergo painful and often unsuccessful operations, or wear a wig,
they are now able to book an easy appointment for a minor operation with a good
chance of success. The battle to regain femininity is being won at last.
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| About the author |
Harley Street Hair Clinic is experts in Hair Loss Treatment and Hair Replacement Surgery. Female hair loss is less common than its male equivalent: women have androgens as well as men, but obviously men, being male, have more. For more information please visit http://www.hshairclinic.co.uk/hair-loss/women-hair-loss/women-hair-loss |
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