Ciao ragazze,
ho trovato un sito in cui si parla di carenziale:
Estrogen and female alopecia
While androgens are often the cause of female alopecia, there is another hormonal factor – estrogen. This is hardly surprising, considering that abundant hair is clearly a female characteristic. In contrast to testosterone, estrogen helps hair. It does this by helping the hair grow faster and stay on the head longer – resulting in thicker hair. This is the reason women’s hair gets fuller during pregnancy when estrogen levels are quite high, then sheds several weeks after the baby is born.
Estrogen deficiency alopecia generally starts some months before menopause, that is during perimenopause or shortly after menopause. Because estrogen levels start to fall before periods stop, this form of alopecia can be the first sign of approaching menopause. Women vary in this regard however. Sometimes the alopecia does begin until a few months or even a few years after menstruation has ended. Not all women get noticeable alopecia after menopause but most have at least mild thinning.
The alopecia due to low estrogen has the same pattern of distribution as that due to testosterone and dermatologists generally fail to make a distinction. Estrogen deficiency as a cause of hair loss has not found its way into medical textbooks but this does not stop it from happening.
http://www.hormonehelpny.com/column/alopecia.htm
Ma sono le stesse cose che dice il Dr. Marliani![8)][
]
ho trovato un sito in cui si parla di carenziale:
Estrogen and female alopecia
While androgens are often the cause of female alopecia, there is another hormonal factor – estrogen. This is hardly surprising, considering that abundant hair is clearly a female characteristic. In contrast to testosterone, estrogen helps hair. It does this by helping the hair grow faster and stay on the head longer – resulting in thicker hair. This is the reason women’s hair gets fuller during pregnancy when estrogen levels are quite high, then sheds several weeks after the baby is born.
Estrogen deficiency alopecia generally starts some months before menopause, that is during perimenopause or shortly after menopause. Because estrogen levels start to fall before periods stop, this form of alopecia can be the first sign of approaching menopause. Women vary in this regard however. Sometimes the alopecia does begin until a few months or even a few years after menstruation has ended. Not all women get noticeable alopecia after menopause but most have at least mild thinning.
The alopecia due to low estrogen has the same pattern of distribution as that due to testosterone and dermatologists generally fail to make a distinction. Estrogen deficiency as a cause of hair loss has not found its way into medical textbooks but this does not stop it from happening.
http://www.hormonehelpny.com/column/alopecia.htm
Ma sono le stesse cose che dice il Dr. Marliani![8)][