Hair loss affects approximately 80 million men and 46 million women in the United States. It is one of the most common concerns I encounter in my practice, and also one of the most undertreated. Most people who notice thinning or shedding do one of two things: they ignore it, hoping it will stabilize on its own, or they grab an over-the-counter product without understanding whether it addresses the actual cause of their hair loss.
Both approaches typically lead to the same outcome: more loss. Because hair follicles, once they have miniaturized past a certain point, reach a point of no return. The biology of hair loss is one where early action matters enormously, and where doing the right thing at the right time can make a meaningful difference in what you look like and how you feel a decade from now.
Let me walk you through what is actually driving hair loss, what the evidence-based treatment options are, and how we think about this at RMRM.
1. The Biology of Hair Loss
Every hair on your head goes through a continuous cycle. It grows for five to seven years in the anagen phase, transitions briefly, and then rests for about 90 days in the telogen phase before the cycle begins again. Under normal conditions, approximately 84 to 85 percent of your follicles are in the growing phase at any given time. Hair loss, in its most fundamental form, is a shift in that ratio: more follicles in the resting phase, fewer in the growing phase, and over time, follicles that miniaturize from producing thick terminal hairs to producing thin, unpigmented vellus hairs that are nearly invisible.
Once a follicle has miniaturized to the point of producing a vellus hair, no current treatment can revive it. This is the point of no return. Everything in hair loss medicine is about preventing follicles from reaching that point and maintaining the function of the ones that still have meaningful growth capacity.
