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Alopecia areata

Alopecia Areata (allegedly Greek for “fox’s disease”) is a form of hair loss from areas of the body, usually from the scalp. Because it causes bald spots on the head especially in the first stages, it is also called “spot baldness”. Hair loss can extend to eyebrows, eyelashes, facial and nasal hair and create more bald spots elsewhere in the body. In Alopecia totalis, patient is totally bald. In Alopecia universalis, they loses all body hair.

Alopecia is thought to be minor autoimmune disease that makes body to treat its hair follicles[?] as foreign tissue and suppress or stop hair growth. It is not contagious[?] but may be hereditary - there are a few recorded cases of babies being born with congenital[?] alopecia. Whether it is stress-related or not is controversial.

First symptoms are small, soft, round bald patches of just about any shape. This usually happens in late teens but alopecia has been observed with people of all ages. There may be different skin areas with hair loss and regrowth in the same body at the same time. It may go into remission for a time or permanently. The longer the hair loss persists, the fewer is the change that is grows back. It may also be limited to beard (alopecia barbea)

Effects of alopecia are mainly psychological (loss of self image due to hair loss). However, due to its nature as autoimmune disease, patients also tend to have higher incidence of asthma, allergies and atopic[?] dermal ailments and even hypothyroidism. Loss of hair also means that the scalp burns more easily in the sun. Loss of nasal hair increases severity of hay fever[?] and similar allergic conditions. They may also have aberrant nail formation because keratin forms both hair and nails.

There is no known cure aside from hair implants. Most patients end up using a wig.

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