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Articles: Full evaluation prevents
hairloss misdiagnoses Hairloss is "not always what it seems," Wilma Bergfeld, M.D., said, and a patient evaluation "needs to include the usual ingredients: medical exam and personal history, family history of disease, and endocrine disorders." The evaluation also needs to include an extensive drug history that takes account of nonprescription medications and health supplements", said Dr. Bergfeld, head of clinical research in the department of dermatology at the Cleveland Clinic. She pointed to the increasing popularity of natural products both on pharmaceutical and cosmetic levels, many of which can impact hair growth. "Understanding the chemical contents of these natural products is essential to the dermatologist," Dr. Bergfeld said, "but right now, everyone's knowledge is limited." One example is the recent popularity of soy estrogens. "They appear to be helpful in reducing symptoms of menopause, but we don't know if they affect hairloss or hair gain," stated Dr. Bergfeld, who chairs the expert panel of Cosmetic Ingredient Review. OTC products: questionable claims?
Goal: inhibit conversion to DHT. Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) is the most common cause of hirsutism. When untreated, PCOS has a high association with endometrial cancer and osteoporosis. "If these patterns show up in a patient with average weight and normal menses, the source is most often adrenal. The androgen source is pituitary less than 5 percent of the time," she said. In the discussion that followed, many questions centered on evaluating and monitoring female patients. Dr. Bergfeld said spironolactone (Aldactone) is the most popular antiandrogen therapy for hirsutism in the United States, and it is commonly prescribed in combination with oral contraception to improve its effectiveness, reduce menstrual abnormalities, and prevent potential fetal abnormalities. Antiandrogen therapies include drugs that block androgens at the P450 cytochrome receptors and result in decreased testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, and DHEAS. However, antiandrogen therapies, with the exception of cortisone, are fetal teratogens that can feminize a male fetus. "For this reason, birth control is an essential element of treatment during the reproductive years of the patient. Birth control pills suppress the androgen, and are a treatment for polycystic ovary disease," Dr. Bergfeld said.
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