|
Summary
Hair is a living protein, and as with any living
part of our bodies we must be sure to maintain proper health to optimize our chances of maintaining a healthy head of hair. Proper nutrition
is vital to maintaining healthy hair, since the hair is a living and growing part of the body’s system. Viewing it in this manner can help us
to treat our bodies different and raise expectations through proper care. A healthy balanced diet, occasionally with the help of vitamin and
mineral supplements and exercise are all key components to a healthy regimen of maintaining healthy hair.
Male Pattern Baldness (MPB) or
androgenetic alopecia is the condition that over 95% of persons that suffer hair loss have, and it is caused by a rise in DHT, a direct
component of testosterone. The scientific developments of the past two decades have brought hope and promise to many who suffer with this type
of hair loss. Treatments like Rogaine®,
Rogaine® for Women, Propecia, and improved surgical treatments
have brought relief to many who would have previously had to settle for gradual hair loss, wigs, or hairpieces. The discovery of the role
of DHT in preventing hair loss has even opened the doors to possible herbal solutions to hair loss prevention, such as saw palmetto,
nettles, rosemary and horsetail. Even more promising is the fact that the hair loss commonly known as androgenetic alopecia is found to
occur mainly in Western civilization or those who have adopted the ways of Western civilization, meaning that there may be dietary
practices that contribute to hair loss and therefore giving hope to the possibility that diet could control not only temporary hair loss,
but androgenetic alopecia as well.
Doctors and scientists are studying DHT production in the body to understand it more thoroughly. There is an obvious link to hair
loss and prostatic health and this only increases the pace of hair loss discoveries. Most treatments for prostatic diseases such as benign
prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) also have the pleasant side affect of growing hair on the heads of those taking it. With the pace of research
and discoveries today, there is a great deal of optimism in the field of hair loss prevention. Hair is an important part of our dress and
appearance, therefore a large part of our self-esteem. It is likely that there are answers for your situation presently or coming in the
near future.
Remember, the restoration of hair growth is not
an overnight process. The process takes time regardless of the method chosen. Be patient and follow as much of the advice given by
professionals as possible. Keep in mind that the body is a system, and it is the abuse of this system by food intake and environmental causes
that lead to most common hair loss. Through returning the body back to its natural state, hair growth can be restored. Good health to
you!
Resources for Hair Care and Hair Loss
Prevention
These books, websites, and reports may prove helpful to you if you wish to read further about MPB or androgenetic alopecia and its
prevention.
Alopecia Areata: Understanding and Coping with Hair
Loss by Wendy Thompson, M.A. and Jerry Shapiro, M.D. John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore 1996.
Hair Loss Prevention Through Natural Remedies: A
Prescription for Healthier Hair by Ken Peters, David Stuss, and Nick Waddell. Apple Publishing Company, Ltd., Vancouver, British Columbia,
Canada, 1994.
The Hair Replacement Revolution: A Consumer’s Guide to
Effective Hair Replacement Techniques by James Harris and Emanuel Marritt. Square One Publishers.
Bald No More by Morton Walker.
Kensington Publishing Corporation.
Your Hair: Helping to Keep It:
Treatment and Prevention by Neil Sadick and Donald Charles Richardson. St. Martin’s Press.
The Bald Truth by
Spencer David Kobren, Diane B. Eisman, and Eugene H. Eisman. Pocket Books.
Healing Psoriasis: The Natural Alternative by Dr. John O.A. Pagano. The Pagano Organization, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 2nd
Printing, 1995.
Propecia: The Hair-Growth
Breakthrough by Othneil J. Seiden, M.D. Prima Health Publishers, Rocklin, CA, 1998.
The National Alopecia Areata
Foundation (NAAF), P.O. Box 150760, San Rafael, CA 94915-0760, (415) 472-3780
The
National Psoriasis Foundation at 6600 SW 92nd Ave., Suite 300, Portland, OR 97223-7195, (503) 244-7404 or (800)
723-9166
|