Only condition images were generated using AI for illustrative purposes. They do not represent real clients.
Hair Loss
Hair loss, or alopecia, is an umbrella term, not a single condition. It covers situations with very different causes and outcomes: gradual pattern thinning, a sudden diffuse shed, autoimmune patches, or scarring that destroys the follicle. Because reversibility and the right approach depend on the type, the first step is to sort which kind it is.
A symptom, not one diagnosis
Hair grows in cycles from follicles, tiny organs in the scalp, and most hair loss is a disruption of that cycle. Follicles can shrink and shorten their cycle, shift into resting phase all at once, or be attacked by the immune system. Each disruption behaves differently, which is why hair loss is more like stomach pain than a single illness.
Three questions help point to the type. The pattern: diffuse all over suggests a stress-related shed, a receding hairline or widening part suggests pattern loss, and round, defined patches suggest the autoimmune form. The speed: sudden and heavy, or slow over years. And the scalp: smooth and normal, or red, scaly, itchy or sore, which is a signal to seek medical care.
What causes hair loss?
Hair loss has several distinct causes, and telling them apart decides everything that follows. Some are temporary and reverse on their own, some are progressive, and a few are permanent. The factors below are the main families to distinguish, because each carries a different outlook and a different path, and a medical diagnosis guides care.
Pattern (androgenetic) loss
The most common cause is genetic and hormonal. On an inherited background, certain follicles gradually shrink, producing finer, shorter hairs over years. In men it traces a receding hairline and crown; in women, a diffuse thinning at the part that usually spares the frontline. It is slow and progressive rather than a sudden shed.
A diffuse shed after a shock
A shock to the body, childbirth, illness, surgery, rapid weight loss, iron deficiency or major stress, can push many follicles into resting phase at once. The shedding appears two to three months later, diffuse and abundant. This form, telogen effluvium, is usually temporary and reverses once the underlying cause is found and addressed.
Autoimmune and scarring causes
Sometimes the immune system attacks growing follicles, causing smooth, round patches, alopecia areata, where the follicle is paused, not destroyed. More rarely, inflammation destroys the follicle and replaces it with scar tissue, which does not regrow. Both are medical situations that call for diagnosis rather than a cosmetic fix.
Mechanical and other causes
Tight, repeated hairstyles can cause traction loss along the edges, and some medical treatments or habits also thin the hair. These are worth identifying because several are reversible once the cause stops. As with every type, an assessment clarifies what is happening before any treatment is considered.
How to Prevent
Personalized treatments for you.
Mesotherapy
Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP)
Platelet-Rich Plasma Therapy for Hair Loss
Platelet-Rich Fibrin (PRF)
Keravive
Scalp Revive
Private Aesthetic Dermatology
Exosome Therapy
Exosome Hair Therapy