Baldness
- Hair loss
- Alopecia
- Androgenetic alopecia
Nature
Baldness is the partial or complete lack of hair growth. This happens in both males and females. Among males, however, gradual baldness may start any time after puberty by recession at the temple hairline and crown thinning. The action of the male hormone, testosterone, on genetically predisposed follicles causes a degenerative change in their hair production capability. Bald patches on the heads of men or women may be due to localized follicle disease such as ring worm and acne (Acne vulgaris), or to other conditions affecting the general health.
Background
Male pattern baldness and female pattern baldness, or androgenetic alopecia, is an inherited trait. It results in too high a concentration of the hormone dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in the blood. The DHT builds up in the scalp and damages the hair-producing follicles, which eventually die. DHT is produced when a chemical in the body converts androgen to DHT.
Incidence
Around 40 million men and 30 million women in the USA suffer from baldness. Collectively, they spend more than $1 billion a year on shampoos, hair pieces, lotions, pills and follicle transplants (hair transplants: $800 million, with each transplant costing from $3,000 to $20,000; hair systems, also known as toupees and hairpieces: $250 million annually; medical therapies: $225 million; vitamins and nutritional supplements: $60 million.
Claim
Baldness, complete or partial, causes acute embarrassment in some people and a feeling of social inferiority which inhibits the development and expression of the personality. The stigma of hair loss, and attempts to disguise this with toupées, is a source of vulnerability to some men. Disclosure of their baldness has been used to embarrass or threaten them. To expunge discriminatory thinking and speech, it is argued that "bald" should be replaced by the term "follically challenged".
Men who lose their head hair fast have a slightly higher risk of heart attack, according to a 1995 study. Some common factor, such as a high testosterone level, or a deficiency of nitric oxide could cause both the hair loss and the higher rate of heart attack. The extent of hair loss is not related to coronary heart disease.
Counter-claim
It is ironic that baldness should be associated with inferiority, or "lack of manliness". The male hormone which causes hair loss is equally the source of male libido. Baldness and "degree of masculinity" show no relationship by any objective measure, just in the minds of certain people.