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137
Early Detection of Decreased Hair Numbers and Hair Miniaturisation
in Androgenetic Alopecia in Man.
T. Leroy and D. Van Neste. Skinterface sprl,
Tournai, Belgium and Hair Technology®, Brussels, Belgium
In male androgenetic alopecia (AGA), global
changes of scalp hair observed on many years are the result
of discrete structural and/or functional modifications at
the level of individual hair follicles. The aim of this study
was to evaluate correlation between hair density, % of thin
hair and clinical staging. 5 controls (C) and 21 untreated
male subjects with AGA (16-51 years) were examined and classified
according to a modified Norwood-Hamilton scale (9 stage I-II
; 9 stage III and 3 stage V). Scalp photographs (primary enlargement
x 3) were taken in all subjects on 3 anatomical sites (fixed
coordinates on the left and right side of the top of the head
and one occipital). Hair counts were obtained from two different
photographic procedures i.e. before and after contrast enhancement
(CE). Percentages of thin hair (< 40µm) were obtained after
microscopic measures on clipped hair. We observed more scalp
hairs after contrast enhancement (p<0,0001). Significant differences
of extra hair (n/cm2) were detected specifically between groups
(p=0,0002) on top of head (C +29; AGA +60) as opposed to the
occipital site (C +29; AGA +33). On the top of the head, we
observed a decrease of hair density with both photographic
methods (controls > I -II = III > V; p<0,05) and an increase
of thin hair (I - II = III < V; p<0,0001) in correlation with
the Hamilton severity score while no changes were recorded
in the occipital site. The extra 60 hairs observed after CE
in AGA (top of head) reflects probably a mixed population
of thin and less coloured hair already engaged in the “miniaturisation
process” usually undetected without CE. The density changes
occur at an early stage of AGA while the top of the head is
not yet clinically affected (severity grades I - III). The
more drastic decreases of density in the more severely affected
patients (V) are consistent with hair thinning and the clinical
observation of an expanding wave of follicular hypotrophy.
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