Androgenic Alopecia: What Is It & What To Do About It (Solution For Hair Baldness)
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 Published On Premiered Apr 8, 2021

Looking for a solution for hair baldness? Today's video is for you. You might have heard the term androgenic alopecia in the process of searching. But what is Androgenic Alopecia? Let's talk about it.

If you break down to the term, it's actually pretty self-explanatory. So androgen for andro, genic for genetic, and alopecia for hair loss. So it's androgen, genetically related hair loss. So antigens are a set of hormones. In this particular case, DHT is the culprit or dihydrotestosterone that obviously play a lot of roles in your body.

But in this case, if you have a DHT sensitivity, that's genetically programmed into your hair, then at some point, your DHT is going to impact the hair on your scalp, and it will begin to fall out. Slow and gradual over time, this can impact both men and women. It can start as early as 18 for men.

Oftentimes it won't start until in the mid thirties for women depending on their hormones, or it could start as late as in your fifties, sixties or seventies, it's really all about genetics. Lifestyle factors and exactly how your hormonal balance is occurring within your body. So collectively, if you're dealing with androgenetic alopecia, there's a couple of things that really stand out about this type of hair loss that will allow you to identify it.

So one androgenetic alopecia only occurs on the top of the scalp. So we'll only be happening on the top of the head because of that. When you're looking in the mirror, if you've got uniformed hair loss throughout your entire head, It's not androgenetic alopecia. If you have more hair loss on the top of your head, then on the sides of the scalp, then it probably is a related to DHD because there's other types of hair loss that might actually be impacting the sides of the scalp.

So when you're looking at that again, DHT or Androgenetic hair loss only happens on the top of the head. So typically it's in a pattern. So obviously you're going to see some loss typically at the front and then the back, and then it will meet in the middle. More women will actually lose hair in the middle, just a spot behind that frontal hairline.

And it will spread out oftentimes in a Christmas tree pattern. But again, it's really dependent upon your genetic pattern. Also there has to be a family history. So if there's no one else in your family, that's lost hair, then realistically it is unlikely that you're dealing with DHT related loss. Now, some people don't know their family, they may be adopted or.

Maybe some of the older people in their family had passed on early, so they don't have that connection to their genetic history. So that may be a little bit more of a challenge, but ultimately if you're losing hair in a pattern, then it is most likely DHT related loss. If it's only on the top of the head.

Some of the other attributes of a DHT or Androgenetic hair loss, you will notice that there's oftentimes more oil in the areas of hair loss. So like in the temples, frontal hairline, maybe the midsection of the scalper and the crown increased oil is your body basically trying to push out the excessive amount of DHT binding to the hair follicle because it knows it's bad and creating inflammation and it's trying to flush it out.

Another item. That is a really a key factor for androgenetic alopecia is the fact that it's slow and gradual over time. So if you had nine months ago, a full head of hair and you've lost 50% of your hair in the last nine months, it is unlikely that it is exclusively DHT related or DHT related at all.

Because it takes time for those hairs to fall out and grow back smaller and finer and do this cyclically for many, many years to actually create a level of miniaturization that's noticeable. Now you may have a powerful genetic history, so it happens a little bit faster in a couple of years, but it's not going to happen in months.

Now that you can identify whether you have DHT related loss or not, how do you fix it? So there are two paths actually. So there's a pharmaceutical path. And then there is a natural path. Now I usually always recommend the natural path unless something else is going on a very strong genetic predisposition.

Chapters:
0:00 Androgenic Alopecia Introduction
0:34 Androgenetic Alopecia Explained
1:40 How to identify Androgenic Alopecia
4:14 How to treat DHT related Hair Loss
4:35 Natural DHT Blockers for hair loss
6:07 Pharmaceutical ​DHT Blockers for hair loss
7:11 Womens Hair Loss Pharmaceuticals
8:22 Other Hair Loss reasons

Take the Quiz: https://www.advancedtrichology.com/pa...

Natural DHT Blockers in this Video:
• DHT Blocker: https://www.advancedtrichology.com/pr...
• NutraM Scalp Serum: https://www.advancedtrichology.com/pr...

Website: https://www.advancedtrichology.com/

#AndrogenicAlopecia #hairbaldness #hairlossolution

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