The Peter Attia Drive - #316 - AMA #63: A guide for hair loss: causes, treatments, transplants, and sex-specific considerations
Episode Date: September 9, 2024View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter In this “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) episode, Peter dives deep i...nto the topic of hair loss, exploring its relationship with aging and its impact on quality of life. The conversation focuses on androgenic alopecia, the most common form of hair loss in both men and women, and covers the differences in patterns and causes between the sexes. Peter delves into the right timing for treatment, breaking down various options such as minoxidil and finasteride, low-level laser therapy, platelet-rich plasma injections, and more. Additionally, Peter outlines the pros and cons of the two primary hair transplantation methods and concludes with practical advice on selecting the right specialist or treatment team for those facing hair loss. If you’re not a subscriber and are listening on a podcast player, you’ll only be able to hear a preview of the AMA. If you’re a subscriber, you can now listen to this full episode on your private RSS feed or our website at the AMA #63 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: The impact of hair loss on emotional health [2:15]; The prevalence, patterns, and causes of hair loss in men and women [5:15]; The genetic and hormonal causes of hair loss, and the role of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in androgenic alopecia [8:45]; The visual differences in hair loss patterns between men and women, and the importance of consulting a specialist to rule out non-genetic causes of hair loss [13:30]; How genetic predisposition influences the risk of androgenic alopecia, and how early detection through diagnostic tools and blood tests can help manage risk more effectively [16:45]; Ideal timing for starting treatment: why early treatment is crucial for effectively managing hair loss [19:30]; The various FDA-approved treatments for androgenic alopecia, their mechanisms, and additional off-label treatments commonly used to manage hair loss [24:30]; Topical minoxidil—the most commonly recommended starting treatment for hair loss [30:15]; Oral vs. topical minoxidil: efficacy, ease of use, and potential side effects that must be considered [33:45]; Finasteride for treating hair loss: efficacy, potential side effects on libido, and the need for careful PSA monitoring in men to avoid missing early signs of prostate cancer [37:15]; Other effective hair loss treatments for women: boosting hair density with spironolactone gel and ketoconazole shampoo as part of a comprehensive strategy [41:30]; Low-level laser therapy: effectiveness, costs, practicality, and a comparison of in-office treatments with at-home devices [49:00]; Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) as a treatment for hair loss: potential effectiveness, varying protocols, and significant costs [53:45]; Hair transplant for advanced hair loss: criteria and considerations [58:00]; Types of hair transplants: follicular unit transplantation (FUT) vs. follicular unit extraction (FUE) [1:02:00]; The financial cost of hair transplant surgery, and what to consider when seeking affordable options [1:06:15]; The potential risks and downsides of the various hair transplant procedures [1:09:30]; Post-procedure care for hair transplants and whether the procedure must be repeated periodically [1:16:30]; Combining different hair loss treatments: benefits, risks, and considerations [1:18:30]; Emerging hair loss treatments with limited data [1:21:00]; Key considerations for selecting the right treatment plan for hair loss [1:22:00]; A summary of the different considerations for men and women facing hair loss [1:24:30]; Practical advice on selecting the right specialist or treatment team [1:26:15]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek, ask me anything or AMA episode of the Drive Podcast.
I'm your host, Peter Atiya.
At the end of this short episode, I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full,
along with a ton of other membership benefits we've created.
Or you can learn more now by going to peteratiamd.com forward slash subscribe. So without further
delay, here's today's sneak peek of the Ask Me Anything episode.
Welcome to Ask Me Anything episode 63. I'm once again joined by my co-host, Nick Stenson. In today's episode,
we cover all things related to hair loss. While hair loss is not a direct threat to
lifespan, of course, it certainly can be a relatable topic when speaking about aging,
and one could certainly make the case that it factors into health span and quality of
life. It's also a topic I get asked about a great amount through you, the listeners,
and also my patients.
In this conversation, we talk about hair loss primarily as it relates to aging, which is
a type of hair loss that is called androgenic alopecia. This is the most common form of
hair loss for men certainly, and it also plays a significant role in hair loss for women.
We describe the differences, of course, between men and women because they have a very different
pattern of hair loss and obviously somewhat different etiologies.
We talk about when the right time to start treatment is and what the breakdown of various
treatments are.
We cover everything from the pharmacologic uses of minoxidil, finasteride, dutasteride, spironolactone, ketoconazole shampoo,
low-level laser therapy, and PRP injections.
We then get into the two schools of hair transplantation,
talking about the pros and cons of each.
We wrap up the discussion by trying to provide guidance
on how to decide which option is best
for someone losing their hair, again, male or female,
and recapping the differences between the sexes in regard to this.
We offer some guidance on what to look for when choosing a specialist or team for treatment.
Finally, I want to note that this is an episode that is available in audio only as we were
not able to record this one in video. So without further delay, I hope you enjoy AMA number 63.
Peter, welcome to another AMA.
How you doing?
Good, yeah, thanks for having me back.
Always happy to have you back.
So a lot of times on our podcast in AMA
is we're getting into topics around lifespan, health span,
but today is a little different.
In a way, we're talking about a subject
that doesn't really relate to either lifespan or health span.
However, it's one of the most common questions.
Not only are we asked about through the podcast
and the website, but I know it's a question
your patients ask you a lot about as well,
which is the topic of hair loss and what you can do about it.
So we decided to pull all these questions together and through this,
we're going to talk about the various causes of hair loss options available for
people to either slow the rate of hair loss or even what they can do once they
experience it. We'll look at various treatments and then at the end,
summarize those into kind of how
people can think about what's best for them.
We'll also talk a little bit about what to look for and how people can find a good specialist
if they need to go down that route.
Lastly, I will say that through this conversation, we will look at hair loss and how it relates
to both men and women.
So with all that said, I think we can get
started but we should say, I think this is a topic you've never personally thought about,
correct? Because how old were you when you started shaving your head?
I shaved my head when I was 22 or 23 years old, 22 actually, and it was a dare. My then girlfriend's dad got dared into shaving his head
at work and I was like, that actually looks pretty cool.
And he's like, well, you should do it too.
And so we went out back and he clipped all my hair off
and I never once grew it back.
So yes, as we were going through this
and the preparing for this, there were a lot of
questions that I also had about when an individual is losing their hair, what do they notice?
Do they notice the actual loss of hair density visually?
Is that the first sign or do they notice hairs falling out on their pillow or their drains?
I never experienced anything like that because of what's noted.
I would point out one thing though, Nick, is potentially something that some might quibble
over which is we said that this really has nothing to do with lifespan and I think that's
almost assuredly true.
But you could make the argument that this has something to do for healthspan.
For an individual for whom this creates distress, that probably does impair quality of life
in some way.
And so while not traditionally something we think of
as health span, like physical cognitive performance,
this maybe fits in the bucket of emotional health.
And so I guess that's just one more reason
beyond all the reasons stated why I think
it's an important topic to discuss.
What would it take from a DARE perspective
to get you to grow your hair back out
in its current form for three or four
weeks just to see what it looks like.
Well, I feel like I've done that before.
Three or four weeks is not that long a growth, so I'm not really sure.
All right.
Well, getting into it, I think just to set the stage, we should start by talking about
how common is it for people to experience hair loss as they age for men and women?
Look, I think a lot of people will be surprised to understand that hair loss for women is actually
quite common as well. But I think before we dive into this, it's worth explaining some of the
differences. So hair loss has a number of causes or potential causes. Today we're going to focus on mainly what's called
androgenic alopecia or AGA. This is the type of hair loss that is responsible for about 95%
of hair loss in men and certainly at least half of the cases of hair loss in women. So again, when a guy is losing his hair, it is
almost always this androgenic alopecia that we're going to talk about. And if a woman's hair is
thinning and we're going to spend time talking about the totally different patterns of hair loss
that exist here, this is very often also androgenic alopecia. But in the case of women,
there are other cases that must be ruled out because they play a much more frequent role.
So again, it's difficult in women to get clear numbers on this because there are temporary
causes of hair loss in women.
So any woman listening to this who's been pregnant will absolutely understand that your
hair tends to get thicker during the pregnancy and then post pregnancy your hair tends to get thicker during the pregnancy and then post-pregnancy
your hair tends to thin and it thins usually more than the gain of thickness that you had
during the pregnancy. So again, do we include that in hair loss for women? Yes or no. That
would sort of determine a little bit where these numbers shake out. But I think for the
purpose of this discussion, we want to talk about forms of hair loss that
are not related to some of the other more treatable causes. So what might those be?
Well autoimmune conditions along with significant psychological stress and hormonal changes.
And again, we talked about those in pregnancy and menopause, but also deficiencies in certain
vitamins and minerals. And the most notable examples here are iron, vitamin D, and B12, along with certain medications. Again, this is really, really rare,
but there are examples of people who have experienced reversible hair loss with statins,
antidepressants, and even certain antihypertensives. Again, these are exceedingly rare, but certainly
worth ruling out. We'll come back to some of these later, but just to say from now on,
when we're talking about this for most of this episode of the podcast, we're going
to be referring to androgenic alopecia.
Okay. So let's talk a little bit about now the prevalence of this. So male pattern hair loss
affects around 30 to 50% of men by the age of 50. And female hair loss or female pattern hair loss is also surprisingly common. This was surprising to me. It affects 20 to 50% of women over the
course of their entire lifespan. So not quite as significant, and obviously the patterns look very different.
We'll include in the show notes what those patterns look like.
But nevertheless, it can vary by geography and ethnicity as well.
Now virtually all cases of male pattern hair loss are manifest by age 40, but female pattern
hair loss doesn't necessarily begin early in life.
It can certainly begin by age 40, but it may
begin as late as age 60. And there are extreme cases where both can begin as early as late
teens and even early twenties.
Given that prevalence, what do we know about the potential causes of it?
Well, it's really a genetic susceptibility married to a hormonal manifestation.
So basically a genetically susceptible hair follicle is exposed to hormones,
most notably dihydrotestosterone, which leads to a process of miniaturization
and gradual thinning of the hair shaft over time due to the follicle shrinkage.
And that results in finer and finer
and shorter and shorter hairs.
So people who have listened to this podcast
are probably familiar with that hormone
I just rattled off called DHT or dihydrotestosterone,
but we'll take a minute to refresh on it.
Remember, both men and women make testosterone.
Men make much more of it,
typically on the order of 10 Men make much more of it, typically on the order
of 10 to 12 times more of it, but both men and women will convert the
testosterone they have into a more potent hormone called dihydrotestosterone.
And I say more potent because it has a much higher binding affinity for what's
called the androgen receptor. Remember, every hormone out
there only works when it can bind to a receptor. The receptor that testosterone binds to is called
the androgen receptor or AR. It binds with a certain affinity and that's just a fancy word
for saying it binds with a certain strength. But DHT, which is just a derivative of testosterone, one step removed from it,
binds at much, much higher affinity.
It varies, some estimates would suggest, 20 times higher.
You have this hormone called DHT that has even a greater affinity for the androgen receptor,
and DHT binding to hair follicles will actually lead to this process of miniaturization.
What we think is going on here is because this is not one gene, to be clear, this is
probably polygenic, but probably the most common cause of androgenic alopecia is differences
in the susceptibility or sensitivity of the hair follicle
to DHT. In other words, it's far less likely that the differences between people who experience
baldness and those who do not is the generation of more DHT. In other words, it's probably not
something that results in the increase in fivepha reductase conversion to DHT,
although there are clearly differences there. To be clear, there are absolutely clear differences
between what's called 5-alpha and 5-beta reductase activity, people who make more DHT versus those
who don't. It's just I haven't personally seen evidence, Nick, that that's what's driving the difference in hair loss.
Because at the end of the day,
even a person who has low 5-alpha reductase activity,
which would be genetically determined,
still makes sufficient DHT
that if their follicles are sensitive,
they're going to ultimately end up losing it.
So that's kind of in a nutshell what's driving the process.
So what is an implication of that? Well, if you have a person who is increasing their DHT
level and they're susceptible, then they're increasing their likelihood of baldness.
So taking supplemental testosterone, for example, is going to increase DHT levels unless you're taking
medications to block the conversion of testosterone to DHT, which we'll discuss. That would accelerate
the process in someone who's genetically predisposed. DHT levels per se are not a marker
for androgenic alopecia. It's not clear if elevated DHT is necessary for AGA, androgenic calpica,
or whether it's even sufficient.
In other words, what I have not been able to find in the literature is a minimum threshold
of DHT that if beneath that level is impossible for a hair follicle to come out.
So presumably that would be zero, but can hair loss be stopped completely if DHT is
below nine nanograms per deciliter versus 15 nanograms per deciliter versus five nanograms
per deciliter?
I haven't seen those data.
I'm just not convinced that that information is known.
So I guess my takeaway on all of this, because I know that that was a much longer answer
than you probably wanted, is genetic sensitivity to DHT appears far more important than absolute DHT level.
But as we will see, lowering DHT is a very important strategy to either preventing or
halting hair loss.
In terms of how hair loss will visibly show up for someone, do we know anything about
if there's differences between that visual look for men versus women?
Yeah.
I think in the case of men, it's pretty obvious.
The hair loss occurs in the temporal region on the top of the head.
There's a scale that will link a figure to in the show notes that walks through the
different stages there.
I think it's actually female pattern hair loss that's much more nuanced and much more
diffuse, and it doesn't resemble that at all.
It tends to begin with a widening right at the part in the middle of the head and the
thinning at the top of the scalp with potentially a little bit of frontal hairline recession.
Of course, women are far less likely than men to experience significant balding, but
it's a really different pattern.
Again, it all comes down to the sensitivity of the given follicles to DHT.
I'm sure somebody listening will chime in to the following question I've never seen a great example of, which is,
what is the evolutionary explanation for this? Presumably, this is something that occurred for
the most part after the passage of genes. It's not necessarily a selection feature for mating. But given how conserved it is,
I've often wondered if there's something else about it that hasn't been realized.
So anyway, if anybody's listening and they've come across some interesting ecology papers on,
or at least offering genetic arguments for maybe why the heterogeneity of these polygenic genes have
been conserved over so long.
I'd be curious to understand that.
If someone is sitting there and they're starting to experience this hair loss that follows
these patterns, whether male or female, is it safe for them to assume with how prevalent
AGA is that that is the cause as opposed to other causes
of hair loss or how should they think about that?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's always good
and this will be a theme that comes up over and over again.
It's best to have these things evaluated
by multidisciplinary hair centers
because they tend to bring together the people
who can rule out all of the other causes.
And while it's true that most of the stress related or medication related hair loss patterns tend
to be more diffuse, less patterned, sometimes they're spotty, things of that nature, it
is possible that some of these non-genetic causes such as iron deficiency, anemia can
actually resemble AGA.
I don't think you can just assert that if the pattern doesn't look like this,
you can assume it's not, or more to the point that if the pattern does look like
this, that you don't need to rule out the other things.
I think regardless, one should consult with a hair specialist and rule out those
other causes.
Last question before we start getting into some of the treatments would be if someone is maybe
starting to try and figure out if they are at the early stages of hair loss or let's say they're
younger and just trying to understand what their susceptibility to hair loss is as they grow older,
do we know anything about how someone might know if they're at risk for AGA?
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