Patient With Genetic Hair Loss
Do You Have Genetic Hair Loss or a Thyroid Condition?
Different factors contribute to hair loss in men and women. Such factors need to be determined for both your best overall health the best hair restoration options. While men tend to lose hair based solely on genetics, women typically experience temporary hair loss due to psychological factors and permanently due to aging and hormonal imbalance. However, genetic hair loss or a thyroid condition needs to be examined.

Not surprisingly, you can tell a lot about a person’s health by looking at his or her hair. A full head of thick hair is a sign of youth and vitality. Yet if your hair is thinning or you have a receding hairline, is it hormones, lifestyle choices, genetic hair loss or thyroid condition?

The most common factor in hair loss for women and men is pattern baldness, or androgenic alopecia. Women usually suffer from permanent hair loss due to hormonal imbalance and aging, and temporary hair loss because of psychological factors.

Men tend to lose hair based solely on genetics.

Permanent: 

  • Alopecia areata, totalis, universalis
  • Traction/scarring alopecia
  • Trichotillomania
  • Lupus

Temporary:

  • Untreated hypothyroidism
  • Severe stress
  • Hormone imbalance
  • Pregnancy
  • Poor circulation
  • Malnourishment
  • Iron/folic acid deficiency
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Illness
  • Drug use
  • Telogen effluvium
hair loss from genetics
Genetic hair loss or a thyroid condition? This patient suffered male pattern baldness and opted for a hair transplant.*

GENETIC HAIR LOSS OR A THYROID CONDITION

Did you know that hair cells are some of the fastest growing cells in the body? However, stress also wrecks havoc on your hair.  When your body is under stress from an underlying illness, hair cells can shut down. They shut down to redirect the energy to where it’s most needed.

If you are unaware you have a thyroid condition, it’s impossible to determine whether it’s genetic hair loss or a thyroid condition. While almost half of the population in the U.S. experiences hair thinning by the age of 40, according to the Academy of Dermatology, people with certain thyroid conditions may start to lose their hair even earlier and more quickly. If your hair loss stems from a thyroid condition, medication can help. Your physician will prescribe a thyroid hormone medication to moderate your condition, which also helps your hair grow back. Hair loss slow with eventual regrowth of stronger, thicker hair. This may take several months but hair loss and hair regrowth eventually normalizes.

If you’re on thyroid medication for several months with no benefits to your hair, ask for a T3 test. The test measures for a specific thyroid hormone called triiodothyronine.

WHEN TO LOOK INTO HAIR TRANSPLANTATION

Once your physical has determined whether it’s genetic hair loss or a thyroid condition, treatment can move forward. And once underlying medical conditions are rules out for hair loss, transplantation is usually the best hair loss treatment for a number of reasons. Not only does the surgery address the issue, it’s a permanent solution.

Hairpieces need to continuously worn and maintained. Meditations for hair loss need to be used or taken on a consistent basis. Hair transplantation is a treatment done once, except in the case of hair repair surgeries.

Related article

Genetic Hair Loss or Thyroid Disease what is the cause of your hair loss

 
Try DIY uGraft Calculator ©