Why is my Hair Thinning Out? – BlackDoctor.org
Ellis Dean discusses hair loss and some of its causes and possible remedies with Dr. Brooke.
BDO Ellis Dean: Good evening, good evening. And welcome to operation life back to the basics. Some something that really impacts black people, but not too much to the point of death, but something that is very, very important to us is our skin and our hair.Ā
Is hair loss just hereditary? Is it stress? What causes this, because I saw this statistic that said up to a third or a half of black women suffer some amount of hair loss in their lifetime. Thatās a lot. So what is the reasoning? Whatās going on and why is all that happening?
Dr. Brooke Jackson:
Hair loss means alopecia, but there are many different types of alopecia. And so generally we divide alopecia into two broad categories, scarring and non scarring, and there are lots of reasons for both.
And so weāll talk a little bit about non scarring alopecia. Those are the types that is the type of hair loss. What typically what people will experience some shedding. Um, you can have them as related to medication. A lot of blood pressure medications will do this. You can have this. If it relates to any kind of autoimmune condition, people who have thyroid problems may have this people who are on chronic redness zone like transplant patients can have hair loss as well. Here. It becomes very thin and fragile. There are several that are related to stress. One is called alopecia. Areata. Thatās typically where you get these little round patches of hair loss. A lot of times men will have it in the beard women and children, and everyone will have it on the scalp as well, but absolutely associated with stress.
And that is 100% stress associated. And it is very classic and predictable three months after a stressful event. And so when we talk to people about whatās going on with their hair, itās not in this moment but more like, what was going on with you three months ago.
BDO Ellis Dean:Ā
So with, you know, so we know as, as black people in this country, there is this kind of daily stressor that happens in terms of like, what happens if you know, a police officer gets behind you, weāve got these microaggressions that happened at work, you know, all of these kind of subtle things that happen just day to day. Um, I donāt wanna say racism, but just day-to-day reminders of, of this kind of black existence in this country, is that a contributing factor? Could that be kind of a prolonged, which is why you see a lot of, you know, especially men, experienced hair loss in their lifetime?
Dr. Brooke Jackson: I think particularly brown people have become so accustomed to these microaggressions that it, you have to learn how to survive. Weāre in survival mode all the time. And then you had COVID and then you add whatever else is going on in your life. And so you have just become numb really to the level of stress in your body, because youāre just trying to survive it. That doesnāt mean it doesnāt exist. So itās not no longer level 10, which it would be for somebody else for now, for you. Itās a level two. Right. But itās still stressful. It is all exacerbated by stress.
We didnāt really talk about scarring alopecia, but I will talk about that for a minute because what scarring alopecia, disproportionately affects African-American women. That is devastating. When I see patients come in that have been hiding their hair loss. And so, you know, as I mentioned earlier, as soon as you see something do something, right? So thatās two with the hairstylist. We want to educate our hairstylists because theyāre looking at the top of your head. And I think sometimes Iāve had patients who blame their hairstylists for their hair loss. And thatās not the case. Itās, you know if itās right. So, so there are definitely some things that will make it worse, but your hairstylist is the one whoās looking at the top of your scalp, who can see if itās red can see if there are bumps can see if youāre tender. None of those things are normal.
It is not normal for you to have an itchy scalp. It is not normal for you to have bumps on your head. It is not normal for your scalp to be red. And so when you play it off, youāre like, oh, you know, thatās just the way itās supposed to be. No, itās not. Those are all signs of inflammation. Chronic inflammation is the root of all disease, regardless of where it is on your body. Yes. Your hair follicles are chronically inflamed. That is going to turn into scarring. That means your hair follicles are gone here. Follicles are limited resource. They do not regenerate. We donāt get more. We are born with a hundred thousand hair follicles on our head, thatās it? And so when our hair follicles die, when they get scarred down, we have to bid those goodbye. Right. So we then focus on trying to make sure that the process does not continue and damage the residual hair follicles that we have.
BDO Ellis Dean:Ā
Thereās a lot of people that ask about hair loss. I will ask this question to say, how do you know if your hair follicles are dead? Can they be revived? Can it be revised once a hair follicle is dead?
Dr. Brooke Jackson:
Correct. Now, um, in answer to your question, how do you know? Right? Not like you can see it, right? Itās not like you can walk by a dead person on the street and like, well, youāre dead. Right? So, um, I often tell patients with, um, and thereās a difference between scarred down here follicles and miniaturized here felt this, made your eyes hair follicles. That is what happens with pattern, hair loss, where they, your follicle becomes finer, finer, finer. And so thatās why as people are going through pattern, hair loss, the hair becomes thinner, thinner, finer, finer, fine, or to the point where you canāt even really see it anymore. Okay. With scarring hair loss. And it gets back to the secretary of scarring, alopecia or lupus that you have an inflammatory process. If the inflammation is around the hair follicle and it is not resolved. And so this doesnāt mean that just because you have an inflammatory hair loss that you are doomed, right. What I, the take home message here is donāt sit in the mirror and look at it, put your dermatologist on speed, dial and get an appointment. Okay. As with any disease process, the earlier the intervention, the better the results.
You know, if you go and get a weave and you see a little bit of irritation or redness around your edges, well, number one, donāt get back and go back to that person and get a weave again, but do go see a dermatologist, right? So donāt continue to cover it up. And thatās where patients will get the weave and the wigs, all this theyāre covering it up. Iām like deal with it And there are treatments, there are lots of treatments now. And so again, the earlier we can intervene, the better the results are going to be.
And so as far as the hair loss dead, you canāt see that with a naked eye, right? What you can appreciate is thinning hair, but often we will do a biopsy and Iāve had a lot of patients whoāve come in and, you know, theyāre pretty hopeless and Iām really trying to manage their expectations and we get them going on treatment. And Iām pleasantly surprised that they recover. I am. So, you know, itās, itās never too late.
For more information on this Facebook live topic click the link. Learn how best to address hair loss and what you can do to save or prevent it.Ā Ā
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