Sunday, September 25, 2011

Hair Loss — the Least of Your Worries with Laser Comb

Losing hair is a real tragedy. After all, it is man’s crowning glory! Each one craves for long and thick hair. Hair loss is the most frustrating reality of today’s age. However, today it has become very common. The ones who are blessed with beautiful and healthy hair are fortunate enough.

Hair is exposed to many severe conditions that can damage them. The other reasons for excessive hair fall are dandruff, usage of intense chemicals for hairstyling, hormonal imbalance, and others. Hence, taking proper care of your hair becomes very essential. Determining the causes of hair fall can be very helpful to get appropriate treatment for hair loss.

One suffers from hair loss due to a plethora of reasons from hormonal changes to improper diet. Hormonal imbalance is the topmost reason for hair loss in any individual. In most cases, the DHT hormone damages the hair follicles immensely.

Severe illness is another reason for loss of hair. Infections and thyroid problems can affect the crowning glory. Nutrient deficiencies can cause major hair fall. Being deficient in some vitamins and minerals could be the reason for hair loss. The lack of iron or the inability of the body to completely absorb iron also causes your hair to shed faster.

Stress, infections of the scalp, extreme usage of hairstyling products, and auto-immune disorders are other reasons for the hair to excessively shed.

Hair fall results in various alterations in your behavioral patterns. Lower confidence and self-esteem can make you lose out on major things in life. And, hair loss is one of the problems causing those problems. Hair loss can affect your personality too.

But don’t lose hope; hair growth is possible with the use of a laser comb. Laser comb technology has benefitted people all around the globe. Developing a routine for your hair loss treatment program is vital if you wish to have fuller and thicker hair.

The laser comb works via the principle of photo-bio stimulation, a process where nutrient laser energy is delivered to the hair follicle. Moreover, using the comb gives you the feeling of revitalization.

Adios, thinning hair! With a laser comb, you can take complete control of your hair loss. The laser energy of the comb reverses and stops hair loss completely. The comb energizes weakened hair follicles. It also increases blood flow and circulation in the scalp, paving the way for longer and stronger hair. Laser therapy from the comb increases ATP, thereby stimulating dormant follicles to resume their function in growing hair.

A laser comb revitalizes your hair follicle and also produces healthier and longer hair. Importantly, this comb prevents further hair loss and also stimulates hair re-growth.

If you are looking for the best hair growth product, a laser comb can be a very viable option. Moreover, with the advancement of the internet, you can purchase the comb from online stores at discounted prices and it will be delivered at your doorstep.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Why Laser Therapy? Which Laser Device? How Do They Work?

There always seems to be a lot of information floating around about men’s hair loss and which treatment, if any, is the best receding hair loss treatment. There have been several natural hair loss remedies circulating around the traps of late that possibly hold some promise including the use of laser hair regrowth technologies, which offer many with thinning hair a possible ray of hope.

Laser hair growth treatment has shown some positive effects in some people, which on average have usually occurred within about four months. Predominantly these people have used home-based laser hair devices, approximately three times per week on alternate days, for around 20 minutes at a time. The lasers have effectively shown promise at being able to nourish and stimulate the hair follicles into producing thicker, fuller, healthier hair.

Which Laser Hair Regrowth Devices Work Best?

The industrial grade lasers are usually 5 milliwatts, 650 nanometers of red laser light. This is the wavelength that has been shown to reach deepest into the tissue and is the best to promote new hair growth.

Some equipment sold in the market and which supposedly supports the regrowth of hair are in actual fact no more than electronic add-ons, or fancy natural-colored lights, and they do absolutely nothing to regrow hair. If a product doesn’t offer a satisfaction money-back guarantee, this should tell you everything you need to know—avoid them like the plague; otherwise, you can expect to have wasted your money.

LED (light emitting diode) devices don’t work either. These are nothing more than natural lighting, which is as expected totally ineffective. They may appear cheap, but that’s because they don’t work. Again, check the results guarantee offer. (If they have one or not, chances are they won’t.)

Laser Hair Regrowth Concern about Lasers

A real concern many people have when they think of laser hair regrowth devices is the classic question: are laser hair regrowth lasers harmful? The short answer is no, they aren’t. There are no known or reported side effects of low level laser therapy (LLLT). In fact, the power level of these lasers is considerably lower than most of the electronic gadgets you probably use around the home every day.

So when you use a laser hair regrowth device, you can expect (beyond the possible advantages of increased hair production) other purported health benefits such as improved blood circulation which helps with wound healing, a better supply of blood around the body, lower incidences of swelling, and better help in relieving pain.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Hair Loss: Debunking the Myths and Knowing the Facts

Myths about hair loss and balding have existed for thousands of years. For example, Hippocrates—Father of Medicine—thought that baldness could be cured by a mixture containing horseradish and pigeon droppings. As time moved on, the myths continued to grow—although the reasons for their creation changed slightly.

The proliferation of these myths is most likely due to the overwhelming desire to have a simple solution to a complicated problem—particularly one that is within our control. But today, let’s debunk some of these myths and learn what the facts really are.

Myth 1: Hair loss is caused by clogged pores

Clogged pores, while actually a common cause of acne, do not cause baldness. If common baldness were simply due to clogged pores, then rigorous shampooing would be all that was needed to maintain a full head of hair. This is obviously not the case.

Myth 2: Frequent shampooing causes hair to fall out

When people’s hair start to thin, they sometimes think that shampooing is the cause since they notice hair in the tub. To prevent this, they begin to shampoo less often. The hair that would normally come out in the shower now builds up on the scalp. With the next shampoo application, even more hair ends up in the tub only confirming the patient’s suspicion.

Remember, hereditary baldness is not due to hair falling out but rather by normal hair gradually being replaced by finer thinner hairs. The simple solution is to shampoo every day and the frequency of seeing excess hair in the tub will lessen.

Myth 3: Only men suffer from genetic hair loss

Balding is often thought of as a ‘man’s problem’ but the fact is that over 40 percent of women suffer from significant thinning throughout their lifetime.

Myth 4: Hair loss medications only work in the crown

The main benefit of drugs like minoxidil and finasteride is to slow down or halt hair loss rather than to regrow hair. Although initial studies showing the effectiveness of both minoxidil and finasteride were done on the crown, this doesn’t mean that the medications won’t work on other parts of the scalp as well. In fact, the medicines can work wherever there is thinning and baldness—as long as the area is not completely bald.

Myth 5: Hair loss stops when you get older

Once hair loss begins, it tends to progress over a person’s lifetime and never completely stops. However, the rate at which hair will continue to fall out is hard to guess. The younger you are when you start to lose your hair, the more likely you are to become completely bald.


Now you are better prepared to deal with the realities of hair loss and baldness rather than trudge through the myths. If your personal hair loss is too advanced for minoxidil or finasteride to control, you might consider hair restoration surgery.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Boy Goes Bald Due to Trichotillomania

Hair loss is a common problem that can be caused by a variety of conditions.

Imagine, though, it happening to a young boy because he pulled out his hair.

That’s what Max Sherwood of Riverdale, Iowa, had to endure. Max, 11, has trichotillomania, a psychological disorder that causes people to pull out hair from their head and other parts of the body to the extent that it causes patches of baldness.

‘He started to pull out his eyebrows when he was in second grade, then he quit’, mother Candace Sherwood said. ‘Then, when he started fourth grade, he started to pull out his hair’.

At a loss, the Sherwoods attended a trichotillomania conference and learned about Hair Club for Kids, an organization that provides free hair systems for children with medical conditions that cause hair loss.

Lee Zoppa, a vice president of Hair Club for Kids, says it’s not hair replacement, but a semi-permanent hairpiece made of synthetic fibers woven in with real hair. It lasts about four months, and children who get hair systems get free replacements as often as they need them up until age 17.

Max got his system in October of 2009. After wearing it for just a few months, Max stopped pulling out the hair on his head.

‘Because of the glue in the hair system, he couldn’t pull his hair out and he retrained his brain to focus on things other than pulling his hair’, his mother said.

But even though Max no longer pulls his hair, trichotillomania doesn’t go away, and there’s a chance something will trigger his hair pulling again. Even though he’s only 11, his battle with trichotillomania has already been a long one full of many challenges in addition to the hair pulling.

Walking around with patches of baldness subjected Max to taunts from children and adults.

‘One day, there was a grandma who said to him, “What do you have in your hair?” Max was really embarrassed and he hid behind me’, Sherwood said. ‘A girl at school said, “You look like an old man” and another one said, “You need a new hairdresser”’.

Disorder Stigmatizing and Difficult to Treat

Experts say social stigma is perhaps the most debilitating aspect of trichotillomania.

‘People are very worried about being discovered, and social impairment is a pretty big problem’, said Dr. Martin Franklin, associate professor of clinical psychology and psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine in Philadelphia. ‘There are worries about going out, swimming and a lot of shame’.

The majority of adults who suffer from trichotillomania also suffer from depression, and children might have academic difficulties, Franklin said.

The hair pulling typically starts in childhood, often because of anxiety or boredom.

‘Some say it’s pleasurable in a way’, Franklin said. ‘It calms them down or gets them interested when they’re bored’.

Max is a highly intelligent child, and often got bored in class, his mother said. He also had to switch schools, which created a lot of anxiety, Sherwood added.

Treatment options include medication and behavior therapy, but some studies suggest a combination of both is the most effective. Trichotillomania used to be considered a kind of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), but the medications used to treat OCD are generally ineffective. Instead, experts classify trichotillomania as a body-focused repetitive behavior disorder.

‘The behavior therapy includes trying to get folks to use a substitute behavior and engage in a competing response’, Franklin said.

Max said he now stretches rubber bands instead of pulling his hair, which does help him a little bit.
Max and his parents are thrilled with the progress he has made with his hair system. He’s done so well, indeed, that his hair finally grew back.

‘He got the first haircut he had in two years’, his mother said.

But, she said, Max’s hair system remains in a very important place in the house.

‘We keep it in his bedroom’, she said, ‘to remind him that he stopped pulling’.