Avoiding tight hairstyles helps prevent
alopecia.
by McNamara, Damian
MIAMI BEACH -- Physicians can prevent traction alopecia in children
through early intervention, according to Dr. Heather Woolery-Lloyd.
Although physicians can treat inflammation with topical steroids,
the clinical focus should be counseling patients and parents about
prevention of future damage. "I would like to see an increase in
education to primary care providers to catch it before it starts,"
Dr. Woolery-Lloyd said. "They should emphasize avoidance of tight
hairstyles."
She said that she would also like to see a direct-to-consumer
advertising campaign geared to the black community emphasizing that
traction alopecia is preventable.
"Kids are more likely to achieve regrowth if you stop the
tight hairstyle technique. The prognosis is better if it is caught
earlier," said Dr. Woolery-Lloyd at the annum Masters of Pediatrics
conference sponsored by the University of Miami.
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Although there are no differences in the keratin or amino acid
composition among the hair of Asian, white, or black patients, the
physical properties of a black patient's hair might explain why
traction alopecia is one of the conditions of more concern to children
with skin of color. A black patient's hair is more elliptical and
flattened on cross section, compared with an Asian or white
patient's hair. Most naturally shed hairs of a black patient
feature a frayed tip (J. Am. Acad. Dermatol. 2000;43:814-20).
Researchers observed more longitudinal splitting, fissures, and breaking
of black patients' hair shafts in this study.
Other investigators found decreased tensile strength, resistance to
breakage, and hair density, compared with the hair of white and Asian
patients (Arch. Dermatol. 1999;135:656-8).
A black patient's hair also features fewer elastic fibers to
anchor the hair follicles to the dermis, said Dr. Woolery-Lloyd, di
rector of ethnic skin care, department of dermatology and cutaneous
surgery, University of Miami. This is part of the traction alopecia
etiology. A tight hairstyle is the other main cause of traction
alopecia.
Black children with multitufted braids, for example, are at higher
risk, particularly if the braids or multiple ponytails are pulled too
tightly. Cornrows are another hairstyle that is more common among black
children. Again, traction alopecia can result if these braids along the
scalp are pulled too tightly, Dr. Woolery-Lloyd said. The prevalence of
traction alopecia is increasing among black boys with the increasing
popularity of cornrows.
Chemical relaxers might also increase risk of traction alopecia,
according to a South African study of 1,024 school boys and girls (Br.
J. Dermatol. 2007;157:10610). The researchers found a higher prevalence
of traction alopecia in children with chemically relaxed hair, compared
with the group with untreated hair.
Patients present with hair loss on the frontal or temporal scalp
with a rim of short hairs at the hairline. Some patients "with
very, very tight hairstyles" also have pustules from inflammation
along the hairline, Dr. Woolery-Lloyd said.
Although her presentation addressed traction alopecia in pediatric
patients, in the future she would like to see researchers assess the
viability of hair transplants in adults with traction alopecia, Dr.
Woolery-Lloyd said in an interview.
BY DAMIAN McNAMARA
Miami Bureau
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