Search
for
Sort by
Research
480-510 / 1000+ resultsresearch Alopecia
research Alopecia areata incognita
Alopecia areata incognita causes widespread hair loss without patches and needs a scalp biopsy for diagnosis.
research Alopecia Areata
Alopecia Areata is an autoimmune hair loss condition that needs more research for better treatments.
research A Ten-Year Retrospective Analysis on the Long-Term Survival of Hair Transplants
Hair transplants are generally satisfying and successful, but transplanted hair can thin over time.
research Postmenopausal frontal fibrosing alopecia. Scarring alopecia in a pattern distribution
Postmenopausal frontal fibrosing alopecia may be a unique condition linked to postmenopausal changes.
research Alopecia
Hair loss in children can be caused by fungal infections, trauma, autoimmune disorders, or stress, and treatments vary depending on the cause.
research Hair
Alopecia areata causes significant emotional and social challenges, especially with more hair loss.
research Cicatricial alopecia
research Stem cells and alopecia: a review of pathogenesis
Damaged hair follicle stem cells can cause permanent hair loss, but understanding their role could lead to new treatments.
research Diagnostic challenge: Loose anagen hair syndrome
The study concludes that Loose Anagen Hair Syndrome is a benign condition that usually improves with age but can be hard to diagnose and stressful for the family.
research Clinical and histological challenge in the differential diagnosis of diffuse alopecia: female androgenetic alopecia, telogen effluvium and alopecia areata – part II
Diagnosing diffuse alopecia, a hair loss condition, can be challenging and may require a scalp biopsy or tracking the disease's progression when symptoms and skin tests aren't enough.
research Topical and intralesional therapies for alopecia areata
Many treatments for alopecia areata have inconsistent results; for under 10s, use minoxidil with a corticosteroid, and for over 10s, add ILC and consider diphenylcyclopropenone for widespread cases.
research Alopecia as a rare but distinct manifestation of pemphigus vulgaris
Hair loss is a rare but recognized symptom of pemphigus vulgaris, with patients usually regrowing hair after treatment.
research Frontal fibrosierende Alopezie – Fallbeispiele und Review
Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia is a type of hair loss that mainly affects postmenopausal women, has unclear causes, and lacks evidence-based treatments.
research A case of widespread non‐pigmented hair regrowth in diffuse alopecia areata
A woman with hair loss regrew white hair after taking prednisolone.
research Two Cases of Linear Alopecia on the Occipital Scalp
Two rare bald spots on the back of the scalp were found to be lupus, not alopecia areata.
research The Review On "Alopecia Areata: A Compressive Review of Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, Clinical Pattern and Remedies
Alopecia areata causes sudden, patchy hair loss due to immune system attacks on hair follicles.
research Alopecia areata masquerading as frontal fibrosing alopecia
Alopecia areata can look like frontal fibrosing alopecia, making diagnosis hard.
research Androgenetic alopecia
research Bitemporal Scalp Hair Loss: Differential Diagnosis of Nonscarring and Scarring Conditions.
Understanding the cause of bitemporal hair loss is key to deciding the right treatment.
research An Overview of Alopecias
The document explains different types of hair loss, their causes, and treatments, and suggests future research areas.
research Hair transplantation for the treatment of lichen planopilaris and frontal fibrosing alopecia: A report of two cases
Hair transplantation can effectively restore hair in patients with stable lichen planopilaris or frontal fibrosing alopecia.
research Diffuse hair loss in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus
A woman with lupus experienced hair regrowth after treatment, but hair transplantation is not advised for her condition.
research Topical cyclosporine in alopecia areata
Topical cyclosporine lotion led to noticeable hair regrowth in alopecia universalis.
research Diphenylcyclopropenone in severe alopecia areata in children and adolescents: long-term follow-up and relapse rate
Diphenylcyclopropenone is effective and safe for treating severe alopecia areata in children, with maintenance therapy reducing relapse risk.
research Scalp Micropigmentation for Camouflage of Cicatricial Alopecia From Lichen Planopilaris
research The Review On "Alopecia Areata: A Compressive Review of Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, Clinical Pattern and Remedies
Alopecia areata causes sudden, patchy hair loss due to immune system attacks on hair follicles.
research Common causes of paediatric alopecia
Hair loss in children is often caused by scalp infections, immune disorders, hair pulling, stress, and requires careful treatment due to emotional effects.
research Transitory hair growth using platelet‐rich plasma therapy in stabilized central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia
PRP therapy can temporarily grow hair in CCCA patients but isn't a permanent cure.
research Cellular Activity in the Dermis Surrounding the Hair Bulb in Alopecia Areata
Hair growth in alopecia areata is hindered due to impaired cell activity in the surrounding tissue.