Female hair loss can be exceedingly distressing. Fortunately, new replacement techniques are showing great success in rectifying the problem. Hshairclinic, a reputed hair transplant clinic in the UK offers Follicular Transfer among the newest replacement techniques.
There’s
something about female hair loss
that seems to add a second stigma, almost, to the already considerable pain of
encroaching baldness. In part, that’s probably a simple factor of the rarity of
female baldness – it’s far less likely for a woman to go naturally bald than
for a man. That, in turn, is a function of the known cause of all natural hair
loss, which is an excess of a male hormone in the scalp. Obviously, men are
more likely to have this hormone in abundance because they are male. When a
woman finds herself going bald, it’s more of a shock simply because it doesn’t
happen so much.
Female hair loss
also, obviously, suffers from a cultural connotation. For centuries, women in
Western and Eastern cultures have been identified by the lushness and length of
their hair. Try thinking of a legend, fable or old story in which a central
female character does not have long, luscious hair, and you’ll see what we
mean. There’s a reason Rapunzel had masses of golden hair; just as there’s a
reason that, until recently, sweethearts in Western cultures would routinely
carry a lock of the loved female’s hair with them wherever they went. No
wonder, then, that female hair loss,
when it happens, carries such a freight of shock and embarrassment with it.
When a man loses hair, he is not losing anything culturally associated with
manliness or manhood. When a woman loses hair, part of her cultural
identification as a woman is falling away.
So
– what can be done about it? These days, fortunately, quite a lot. In the past,
dealing with hair loss in a man or a woman was possible up to a point, but
usually futile because it looked so unnatural. Modern treatments for hair loss
can produce a quite convincing head of hair – particularly when the patient
opts for FT, or Follicular Transfer, a mild surgery based technique that
encourages individually implanted hair to grow on a balding site. Female hair loss is as likely to
receive successful treatment in this vein as male hair loss – and the success
rate in men, to date, has been astonishing.
Where
previous methods of hair replacement pretty much relied on an extremely painful
skin grafting procedure (actual areas of skin, with hair still growing in it,
were culled and implanted), FT removes living hairs from a donor area and
implants them individually in the natural skin of the bald spot. The idea is
that each hair should be chosen for the way in which it grows – the closer its
direction, on the natural site, to the desired direction on the bald site; the
better it is as a candidate.
Because
female hair loss is caused by the
exact same thing as male hair loss, and because FT works so well on men, there
is no reason to suppose that it can’t work on women. Indeed, to date there has
been every success with females undergoing the treatment. Female baldness may
well be more distressing than the male counterpart – but at least the
treatments for it are equally successful.
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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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