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DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Everyone deals with hair loss
differently. Some people just take it as a fact of life,
but for a lot of people it's a source of anxiety and
depression. If hair loss is troubling you, what can you
do to overcome your emotional distress, and if treatment
fails, what can you do to prepare yourself for more hair
loss?
Joining us to talk about the psychological
side of hair loss are two experts. On my left is
Dr. Peter Halperin, and next to Peteris Dr. Marc
Avram. Both Peter and Marc are Assistant
Professors in the Department of Dermatology at
Weill Medical College of Cornell University and
New York Hospital in New York City, and Peter,
Marc, thanks for joining us here today.
Let's start talking about the psychological impact of
hair loss, and Peter, I'll start with you. What are some
common reactions when people start losing their hair?
PETER HALPERIN, MD: It can be devastating, David.
People hate losing their hair. It's so important to make
a good first impression, what somebody looks like.And
people make assumptions that they are losing something
about their control of their life or looking older,
things they really can't reverse when they start losing
their hair.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Marc, as far as that goes, is
that, like Peter just mentioned, devastating? So far, I
have not experienced that, but sometimes I see people,
and other people say, "Well, they don't look bad."
They've lost their hair, but it seems like what Peter
said, it's a lot more devastating than those of us on
the outside looking in can imagine.
MARC AVRAM, MD: There's a great variety in how much
it affects people. I think no one, given the choice,
would want to lose their hair. Some people don't like it
but accept it. A lot of people really don't like it, but
don't really know exactly what they can do to stop it,
and some people that we see are really devastated to the
point where it impacts their actions and inactions in
life. So it can seriously affect people to the point
where it paralyzes them in what they do socially and
professionally in their life.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Like their self-esteem and so
forth?
MARC AVRAM, MD: Yes. It can be all different ages. It
can be men and women, different backgrounds. It has
really nothing to do with education, economic status. It
really depends how it affects someone in terms of -- it
may affect someone in a very devastating way
professionally. Someone who's in front of the camera or
someone who needs to be in the public begins to lose
their hair. It could be someone who's on a college
campus, is the only one in the frat house that's losing
their hair and gets teased. So it can make a big impact
on people.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: What different effects, if any,
are there between men and women losing hair?
MARC AVRAM, MD: I think for women it's much more
devastating than men. There is Sean Connery. It is
socially acceptable for men not to have hair if he
doesn't want to. For a lot of men, millions and millions
of men don't like it, and seek treatments, both medical
and surgical, for it. In women there are no role models
to have thinning hair, and unfortunately a lot of the
investigation, the medications, the awareness even in
the medical community is directed toward men and hair
loss, when in fact tens of millions of women have hair
loss, and really there's no social acceptability to have
thinning hair as a woman.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Peter, what about treatments for
these effects of hair loss on people as far as having
low self-esteem or anxiety?
PETER HALPERIN, MD: There are many treatments, both
medical and surgical, and the treatments vary for men
and women, so that men might consider -- men have an
extra option. They can take something called finasteride,
which is an oral medication that's available to them to
stop hair loss and even promote hair growth, whereas
women really don't have that option. Women have a
topical option which is okay, pretty good, and they have
surgical options, and unfortunately it stops there. They
have to rely on wigs and coverings and things like that.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Now, we're mentioning men and
women both experiencing this, but is the rate higher for
men, or am I seeing women out there who I don't realize
have thinning hair because maybe they're covering it up
with a wig. But is it equal percentages of men and women
losing it, or is it still more of a male thing?
MARC AVRAM, MD: It's comparable. The hair loss
pattern is different in a man and a woman. Men, as we
all know, can develop bald areas. They can lose all the
hair on top. For a woman, it's very rare to do that.
Women maintain their hairline. It just becomes diffusely
thin on top, so it's a different pattern of loss, so
it's less obvious in a woman to see the hair loss, but
I'd say it's comparable in number. In men it can just be
more visible. I think you are right. There's also more
women, because of what I mentioned before about the
inability of our society to accept women with thinning
hair, that will do something to make sure that you don't
notice it when you walk down the street.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: What about any hurdles out there
for successful treatment to hair loss? What are the
problems facing that for the medical profession?
PETER HALPERIN, MD: The problem is understanding the
genetics of hair loss and stopping it at that point, and
that's what we don't understand. We don't exactly
understand what genes a person has that contributes to
hair loss, and if we did, we could stop it. One of the
medications that we use, finasteride, is geared toward
interfering with one mechanism of hair loss, so it's a
start. It's a good start.
MARC AVRAM, MD: I think also one of the problems from
the surgical point of view is that for 30, 40 years,
hair transplantation was done with plugs, and if people
have any awareness of the surgical option, unfortunately
it's often the person they once met at a party that had
plugs on their forehead. That's a definition of a failed
surgery, cosmetically. Today, for men and women, in the
right candidate, you can consistently produce
undetectable transplanted hair.
Medically, I think as well, there isn't enough
education in the medical field about what these
medications that Peter mentioned can do and can't do in
terms of what's successful and what's not successful in
terms of treatment. Often, patients come into our office
and say, "The treatment didn't work, because I'm not
seeing hair grow." Well, when you have hair loss, if you
can maintain the hair that you're thinning, just hold it
where you're at, that's successful, because the natural
progression is for it to keep going, to keep losing it.
I think often even the medical community isn't fully
aware of what these medications and what surgery can
really do for hair loss.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: You both are maybe advising or
treating people who are dealing with hair loss, and
we're talking about the psychological impact. Is it
recommended that they seek counseling, usually? Do you
even broach that subject with your patients? Peter, I'll
start with you, and then Marc.
PETER HALPERIN, MD: It depends where they are. If
they're just so tearful and it just is causing an
inability to work, an inability to socialize, changing
their life in a real negative way, then yes, we would
broach that subject, recommend some type of intervention
by a psychiatrist or psychologist. It all depends how
they accept it. Everybody's different. Marc said that,
and it's absolutely true.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Marc can wrap it up. I'll give you
the last word.
MARC AVRAM, MD: I agree. That's why I think often
patients -- Peter sees this also -- often if you just
sit down and listen to someone who's losing their hair,
really listen to what they're saying and understand what
they're explaining, that alone will help a lot of
people, because again, particularly in women, often hair
loss is dismissed. You don't see baldness, you don't see
the thinning hair. You see a hairline attacked. You look
across, the husband says, "Honey, what's the problem?
Look at my head." The doctor says -- her family
practitioner, OB/GYN -- says, "Who cares? You still have
hair up there," and you kind of dismiss it. It makes
people more and more anxious. It's often just listening
to someone, and acknowledging they have a problem helps.
And if someone has a bigger problem, like Peter says,
they absolutely should seek further counseling.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: This just came to me, but we have
less than a minute or 30 seconds to wrap it up. You
know, Michael Jordan and famous athletes shaving their
heads, and that seems to come more in style. Would you
say you see patients that when they start to lose their
hair say, "Well, I'm just going to shave it all off,"
and what's that phenomenon about?
MARC AVRAM, MD: I actually think one of the things
people do is the opposite, which is a big mistake
cosmetically. When people's hair starts thinning, they
actually grow their hair longer and do the comb-over,
which cosmetically is a disaster. It draws more
attention to the thinning. If there's anything to do,
it's to keep your hair short and balanced. It does make
your hair appear fuller. So shorter hair, actually, if
you're thinning, works cosmetically.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Thank you, both of you, Peter and
Marc for taking time. That's all the time we have today.
My name is David Folk Thomas, and we will see you next
time. |