7Newswire
05 Jan 2023, 13:50 GMT+10
It's common to lose your hair as you get older, but it can have an impact on your confidence. We take pride in how our hair looks, so when it starts falling out, you're likely to feel anxious. Thankfully, there are ways that you can improve your hairline, even if you're suffering from genetic hair loss. Choosing to undergo a procedure to restore your hair follicles at a hair transplant clinic Turkey means you can look and feel like yourself again. Read on to find out more about how your genetics affect hair loss.
Genetic hair loss: male pattern baldness
One of the most common causes of hair loss is genetics, which causes male pattern baldness. Whilst the name suggests it happens to men, it can also take place in women too. It's caused by genetics and can be passed down from your parents. It gets its name from the pattern it takes on when you start to lose your hair - you first begin to lose it from the front, changing the shape of your hairline and thinning your temples. In a male, your hair generally will start to recede when you hit your 20s and 30s, for women it happens much later, generally after menopause. When you lose your hair due to genetics, there's not much that can be done to reverse it or treat the problem - although there are things you can try that may slow the process like various medications and over-the-counter treatments. There is a permanent solution that those that suffer from this type of hair loss can take advantage of, which is a hair transplant, to help you restore and create a permanent new hairline.
Other causes of hair loss
There are other reasons that you may suffer from hair loss other than genetics such as hormonal changes that can happen throughout life, whether you're a man or woman. As well as alopecia which is an autoimmune condition which causes hair to fall out in patches. The way that you wear your hair can also have an impact on hair thinning and loss, wearing it in tight hairstyles can pull on the follicles, leading to fraying and falling out. Prolonged periods of stress can also cause issues with your hair and may mean that your hair becomes thinner. Before you can decide how to treat your hair loss, you must pinpoint what is causing your hair to fall out so you can choose the best course of action.
How genetics impacts hair transplantation
As we mentioned above, choosing to have a hair transplant can be a permanent solution depending on the type of hair loss you have. Generally, hair transplants are recommended for those of us that suffer from genetic hair loss like male pattern baldness and allow us to restore our hairlines to the way they once were.
There are a few pieces of criteria that you'll have to meet before you can have a hair transplant. One of them is that you have enough hair to use as a donor site. If you are completely bald, there may not be a sufficient area to use to harvest follicles from, meaning your transplant will be more difficult to complete. It may also be harder to create full coverage. This is why it's best to identify whether your balding is genetic sooner rather than later, so you can use your thinning hair as a donor site. You must also have the ability to grow hair for your transplant to take hold - but your clinic will check for this before your procedure.
Unfortunately, if your balding is caused by alopecia, you will not be able to benefit from a hair transplant. This is because this type of balding is not caused by genetics, but by an autoimmune disease that can have an impact on the whole scalp. This makes it different to genetic hair loss, as even follicles that have been transplanted can be affected - the procedure would not be successful.
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