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Answers for Anyone Suffering From Hair Loss
 
  Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Sheila was in a horrible industrial accident that literally ripped all of the hair off of her head, the accident rendered Sheila scarred and permanently bald. Sheila is one of many people who (for many different reasons) cannot ever grow their natural hair again. Watch the video of Sheila and see how Richard Farrell transformed this beautiful young woman by giving her a complete and perfectly customized hair system made ‘by hand’ and of real human hair. Even the color and style was a perfect match for Sheila, and now she has tons of self confidence.
6/4/2008 4:34:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Hair Loss Articles | Hair Replacement | Real Client Videos  
The first and foremost mistake is having unrealistic expectations. This will always lead to frustrations, no matter how good or bad the treatment was. Irrespective of what the marketers of any hair loss product say, do not believe that you can recover all of your lost hair. Most treatments only enable you to slow down the balding process or, in better instances, to keep the existing hair. The best possible achievement you can expect from any treatment is to regrow the hair you have lost in the previous three years. But this is only possible if you start treating your condition at an early stage. This brings us to the second mistake many hair loss sufferers make - denying their hair loss and starting to treat their condition only after they have already developed a bald patch. The later you start treating the baldness, the less chances you have of regrowing lost hair. In order to regrow hair you must have fine miniaturised hair left in your bald areas. This hair is often called peach fuzz. Once your hair follicles have died and there is no hair left, no miracle can rejuvenate them.
6/4/2008 3:42:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Alopecia Areata | Androgenetic Alopecia | Causes Of Hair Loss | Female Pattern Baldness | Hair Loss Articles | Hair Loss Medications | Hereditary Pattern Baldness  
  Tuesday, June 03, 2008
For most people, hair loss is mild and occurs later in life. However, when hair loss is premature or severe, it can be a source of distress. Although there is no cure, a number of treatments are available that can effectively slow or reduce hair loss and stimulate partial regrowth. Surgical treatment involving hair transplantation is available from some specialist dermatologists and can be helpful for some men with advanced balding.
We produce our hair systems in a manner that they regularly pass the close scrutiny of the high definition cameras of the film industry. We have numerous actor clients, musicians, magicians and other types of entertainment industry personalities who never get detected. At Farrell Hair Replacement there is no smoke and mirrors.
  Monday, June 02, 2008
If the Alopecia Areata disorder results in the loss of the eyebrows and the eyelashes medical tattoo also known as cosmetic tattooing, semi permanent make up, permanent makeup or micropigmentation can provides a long term answer to the problem.Realistic looking eyebrows can be constructed by creating the illusion of ultra fine hair strokes through the implantation of pigments into the skin.
6/2/2008 2:02:53 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Alopecia Areata | Causes Of Hair Loss | Eyebrow and Eyelash | Hair Loss Articles | Medical Hair Loss Research | Womens Hair Loss  
Are you experiencing thinning of your eyelashes? This can be a disturbing problem for women since long, lush eyelashes are considered a sign of beauty in American culture. If you're experiencing this problem, what can you do to prevent loss of eyelashes?
6/2/2008 1:49:27 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Eyebrow and Eyelash | Hair Loss Articles | Hair Loss Articles Teens | Hair Loss Diseases  
  Sunday, June 01, 2008
Hair loss affect about 70% of women who are approaching menopause. Hair loss usually lasts for the whole menopause transition (until the mid 50's), but some women may experience them for the rest of their life. Menopause is not an illness, but a natural process in a woman's body. The symptoms of menopause are just indicators of changes between the hormones estrogen, testosterone and progesterone. These changes result in a hormonal imbalance in a woman's body and cause the common hair loss in women.
What causes it: Normally, the average head loses 100 hairs a day — but not all at once, so you don't notice them. During pregnancy, your hormones keep those hairs from falling out (which is why your hair looks as lush as a supermodel's, or is so thick you can barely get a brush through it). But all good things must come to an end, and that includes your awesome new 'do. When those hormones drop back to normal, the extra hairs drop, too.
6/1/2008 1:18:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Causes Of Hair Loss | Hair Loss Articles | Womens Hair Loss  
  Saturday, May 31, 2008
Many of us face the problem of hair loss, due to many reasons such as not having proper diet, the external surroundings, pollutions etc. So we need to take a lot of care for preventing hair loss, & so let us see how to stop hair loss. First let us see what is the normal hair growth & hair loss cycle. The normal cycle of hair growth lasts for 2 to 6 years. Each hair grows around just a centimeter, which is less than half an inch, per month during this phase of 2 to 6 years. About 90 percent of the hair on your scalp is growing, and the remaining 10 percent of the hair on your scalp is in a resting phase. Then after around 3 months, the resting hair falls out & then new hair starts to grow in its place. It is actually normal to shed some hair each day as a part of this cycle.
5/31/2008 12:50:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Alopecia Areata | Androgenetic Alopecia | Causes Of Hair Loss | Female Pattern Baldness | Hair Loss Articles | Hair Loss Diseases | Hereditary Pattern Baldness | Womens Hair Loss  
The greater the hair loss on the top of a man's head, the higher his risk of having heart problems, according to researchers who say they've confirmed previous studies linking baldness with heart disease. The new report, published Monday, says men who are losing hair on the crown of their heads have up to a 36 percent greater risk of heart problems, including heart attacks and bypass surgery. Men with a receding hairline are not at increased risk, but those going bald at the crown should pay special attention to their blood pressure and cholesterol levels and lead a healthy lifestyle, researchers said.
  Friday, May 30, 2008
Baldness may be more than just a cosmetic indignity: it could be a marker of heart disease risk, especially in men with other risk factors such as high blood pressure or high cholesterol. Heart attacks, chest pain due to blocked arteries (called angina), and the need for balloon angioplasty or bypass surgery all are forms of heart disease, the researchers explained. In men with high cholesterol and severe baldness at the vertex, or crown of the head, heart disease risk was increased nearly threefold compared to men who had high cholesterol but were not bald, senior author JoAnn E. Manson, MD, DrPH, tells WebMD.
5/30/2008 12:40:24 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Causes Of Hair Loss | Female Pattern Baldness | Hair Loss Articles | Hair Loss Diseases | Hereditary Pattern Baldness | Medical Hair Loss Research | Womens Hair Loss  
Alopecia areata is considered an autoimmune disease, in which the immune system, which is designed to protect the body from foreign invaders such as viruses and bacteria, mistakenly attacks the hair follicles, the tiny cup-shaped structures from which hairs grow. This can lead to hair loss on the scalp and elsewhere. In most cases, hair falls out in small, round patches about the size of a quarter. In many cases, the disease does not extend beyond a few bare patches. In some people, hair loss is more extensive. Although uncommon, the disease can progress to cause total loss of hair on the head (referred to as alopecia areata totalis) or complete loss of hair on the head, face, and body (alopecia areata universalis).
  Thursday, May 29, 2008
Research into young people’s experiences of hair loss during cancer treatment has found it is a mistake to assume women will be more affected than men. Scientists analysing interviews with recovered young adult cancer patients enrolled in the DIPEx project found that young men were just as affected by chemotherapy-induced hair loss as young women. However until now, men’s experiences of hair loss have been largely ignored.
5/29/2008 1:13:59 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Causes Of Hair Loss | Hair Loss Articles | Hair Loss Articles Teens | Hair Loss Diseases | Medical Hair Loss Research | Scientific Research  
The association of androgenic alopecia (AGA) with insulin resistance, coronary artery disease and hypercholesterolemia has been previously reported in men, but no such association has been reported in women with female androgenic alopecia (AGA). Female AGA has usually been linked with hyper-androgenism and hirsutism and, most recently, also with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), even though epidemiological documentation of the latter association is scanty. Polycystic ovarian syndrome is quite common among Caucasian women, and its association with insulin resistance is well documented.
5/29/2008 12:28:53 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) Ask A Question #     
Tags: Alopecia Areata | Androgenetic Alopecia | Causes Of Hair Loss | Female Pattern Baldness | Hair Loss Articles | Medical Hair Loss Research | Scientific Research | Womens Hair Loss  

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