Hair
loss... on a woman? It's happening to increasing numbers of us - and
it eats away at your femininity like an acid.
At
a glittering reception at the House of Commons, I manage to catch
actor Martin Kemp's dazzling blue eyes. Next thing I know, he has his
arm around me and we are posing for a photograph together. I am on
Cloud Nine.
A
few days later, I see the photograph and couldn't be more
disappointed. My smile is big and my make-up perfect but, as always,
my thin hair and 4in bald patch spoil my look.
I
started life with hair so bushy my father used to say I looked like
the American comedian Harpo Marx. But in the Seventies - when I was
16 and long, straight hair was in fashion - I took the fateful step
of having it straightened at a local salon.
I
spent a fortune consulting a trichologist, who informed me the
hair-straightening debacle had triggered pattern baldness. I'd
inherited the risk of this from my father, who was balding by the age
of 25.
After
months of applying cream to my hair and scalp and ingesting mountains
of brewer's yeast on the trichologist's advice, there was, sadly, no
improvement.
I
had bald patches, and 30 per cent less hair than I'd had before that
life-changing visit to the salon. I was in despair, made worse every
time I saw a friend with thick, lustrous hair who constantly ran her
fingers through it.
My
first book was published when I was 25. But when the Queen's cousin,
Patrick Lichfield, took my photograph for the cover, I was so ashamed
of my thinning hair I insisted the picture be cropped to hide it.
Worryingly,
female hair loss is on the rise in the UK. In a survey of GPs, 64 per
cent said they had noticed more women patients with hair loss in the
past five years.
Meanwhile
the Transform clinic, one of the UK's leading providers of cosmetic
surgery, has reported a 41 per cent increase in female hair loss
inquiries in the past year. Women constitute a third of their hair
transplant patients.
It's
nine years since I had a hair transplant. My thin hair and balding
scalp was eating away at my confidence, and when my second book was
published, I'd resigned myself to spending hour-upon-hour having my
hair curled and back-combed to make it look presentable.
I
hoped a perm might hide my balding scalp - it didn't - and had my
hair cut short in the vain hope it would look thicker, but all my
efforts failed. In 2004, I saw a photo of myself and noticed a 4in
bald patch.
I
decided to travel to Paris and spend £3,500 on a hair transplant. I
was assured the post-op pain would last a few hours, but for days
afterwards my scalp felt as if it was on fire. Even OxyContin, one of
the strongest painkillers available, didn't help.
The
result of the transplant was disappointing, but my hairdresser has
been my salvation. Twice a week I have five false pieces fixed into
my hair and my own hair styled around them, at a monthly cost of
£200. It's worth every penny for the confidence boost it gives me.
Experts
say the increase in women seeking help for hair loss is in part due
to a greater availability of treatments. But they also warn that
modern lifestyle habits - from delaying having children to fad diets
and over-use of products and straighteners - may be causing more of
us to suffer from thinning, receding and shedding hair.
Dr
Bessam Farjo, medical director of the Institute of Trichologists,
says: 'It causes great distress because a woman's hair is her
crowning glory, and a big part of her identity.'
The
most common cause of hair loss in women is post-menopausal female
pattern baldness, according to Dr Farjo. Falling levels of the female
sex hormone oestrogen mean the male sex hormone dihydrotestosterone
becomes more dominant - this hormone causes men's hair to fall out
and has the same effect in women.
Baldness
is afflicting women of all ages, with Transform reporting that the
average age of female hair-loss patients has fallen from 51 in 2010
to 34 in 2013.
Any
woman suffering baldness should consult a doctor to rule out
conditions such as diabetes, underactive thyroid and polycystic
ovaries. The Pill can also cause hair loss.
However
the most common trigger for thinning hair in younger women is iron
deficiency, which affects 20 per cent of British women aged 19 to
34.
Iron
in the body binds to ferritin - a protein involved in the production
of hair cells which also guards against hair shedding.
Red
meat is one of the best food sources of iron, so a deficiency may be
due to a rise in vegetarianism.
But
Dr Hugh Rushton, consultant trichologist at the University of
Portsmouth, says the key problem is women are delaying motherhood. He
says: 'They spend more time menstruating and this, coupled with
health fears about meat, means around 30 per cent of pre-menopausal
women are shedding hair because they lack iron.'
Dr
Farjo adds that extreme dieting has also been linked to female hair
loss. 'Nutrients like protein, vitamin B complex and zinc are
important for healthy hair. Red meat is rich in protein and iron, so
if you're going to cut it out you need to address that with
supplements or other foods.'
Vitamin
D deficiency may also trigger hair loss.
Another
major lifestyle habit contributing to female baldness is the products
applied to hair and skin, according to Dr Farjo.
He
says: 'Certain dyes, particularly ones containing peroxide bleach,
can cause severe hair breakage over time.'
Alopecia
affects two in every 100 people in the UK. It is an auto-immune
disease in which the body attacks the hair follicle.
Dr
Farjo says: 'The most common treatment for alopecia is steroids, but
it often goes away of its own accord. In extreme cases, it may be
that nothing can be done.'
Hair
experts are warning that a previously rare type of alopecia seems,
inexplicably, to be on the increase. This condition - frontal
fibrosing alopecia - causes the entire hairline to recede.
Many
women with thinning or balding hair may be tempted to turn to
extensions - but Dr Farjo says they could make it worse.
'Traction
alopecia, or mechanical hair loss, is where the use of a product
which pulls the hair, such as straighteners or extensions,
traumatises the hair and causes it to come out.'
I
still dream of finding a solution. A few months ago, hoping that hair
transplant techniques had improved since 2004, I visited a hair
doctor in London.
He
examined my scalp and informed me that my only option was to have my
scalp tattooed in a darker colour to disguise my bald spot.
The
procedure would take the greater part of a day, and involve countless
needles. A tattooed head? Even in my hour of need, that sounds like a
step too far.
I love the way this story ends. She was able to put her priorities right. Some actions can literally be going too far.
Nice story, women are very suffering for hair loss. every girl very worried about hair loss cure I think every women need to read this story.
ReplyDeleteThank you Smith for your comment, so sorry this is coming a little late. I truly appreciate it. Thanks again.
DeleteI suffered sudden rapid hair loss at only 26, so I really identify and empathize with this story. I recently joined an online community for women with hair loss, and met many wonderful people, one of whom just recently received a fue hair transplant with wonderful results. I'm seriously considering opting for this transplant, and I encourage anyone else struggling with hair loss to read more into it!
ReplyDeleteSo sorry for the hair loss, hope the treatment works for you. thanks for the comment.
DeleteThank you Salman and yes I will do that.
ReplyDeleteI feel very depressed after reading your story. In health industry, there are number of other treatments also for preventing hair loss in women. You can try those.
ReplyDelete