The
Most Common Cause Of Baldness- Male Pattern Baldness
(MPB)
There are many causes of
baldness, including serious illness, reaction to certain medication
and stress, but by far the most common is Male Pattern Baldness
(MPB) or Andogenic Alopecia.
MPB is caused by a
combination of two factors - a genetic predisposition and
Dihydrotestosterone (DHT).
DHT is a byproduct of
testosterone, and is therefore present in every male. Scientists
have shown that DHT shrinks hair follicles, and that if DHT is
suppressed, the follicles will continue to thrive.
In 1949 a landmark study
was performed that explained the causes of MPB. A group of
castrated convicts, males who were therefore not producing
testosterone, were divided into two groups. The first group were
those who had a family history of MPB, and the second group were
those with no family history of balding. Both groups were injected
with testosterone; the group with a family history of MPB began
losing their hair within weeks, while the group with no family
history lost no hair, but did begin to develop a mature hairline.
When the injections were stopped, the progression of thinning
stopped.
Looking past the
inhumane and surprising extremes of this experiment, it was
discovered that MPB was an inherited trait that is triggered with
the presence of testosterone. Since that experiment, we have
learned that it is not testosterone but the testosterone byproduct
DHT that causes hair loss. Hair follicles that are sensitive to DHT
must be exposed to the hormone for a prolonged period of time for
the affected follicle to complete the miniaturization process.
Today, with proper intervention, this process can be slowed or even
stopped if caught early enough.
What MPB sufferers
inherit are hair follicles from their mothers or fathers with a
genetic sensitivity to DHT. Hair follicles sensitive to DHT begin
to miniaturize, shortening the lifespan of each hair follicle
affected. Eventually, these follicles stop producing cosmetically
acceptable hair.
MPB is characterized by
a receding hairline and thinning in the temple, crown or vertex
area. These areas are the most sensitive to DHT. For some men, DHT
even thins the hair on the back of the head, although this area is
usually spared, leaving a permanent donor area that can be used for
modern hair transplants.
There are still many
factors about the inheritance of baldness that we don't understand.
I often see a male with a strong family history of MPB that says he
has an older brother with little or no balding. As well, some young
adult males bald rapidly up until the age of 35, whereupon the
balding pattern stops. In contrast, males can also experience
little or no thinning up until their early 40s, and then lose all
or most of their hair in the next 20 years, balding almost
completely by age 60. Unfortunately, we cannot predict the exact
course each individual's balding will take when he is in the early
balding stages. But generally speaking, the earlier you start
losing hair, the more hair you are going to lose.
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