Ann Dermatol.  2003 Dec;15(4):144-148. 10.5021/ad.2003.15.4.144.

Hair Follicles of Anterior Parietal Region are More Vulnerable than Occipital Region in Classic Acute Telogen Effluvium

Abstract

Background
The well known clinical feature of the classic acute telogen effluvium is diffuse hair loss from all over the scalp and the diagnosis is confirmed by a trichogram showing an increased telogen count. While the telogen hair shedding continues, newly cycled back young anagen hairs develop in the involved scalp. Objective: To see if there is a regional difference in the numbers of the involved hair follicles in that seemingly diffuse hair loss. Methods: In 7 cases of the telogen effluvium, the telogen count was done at two sites, anterior parietal and occipital. During the count, the short tapered anagen hairs(<1cm) which developed during the course of the telogen effluvium were counted together and compared according to the regions. Results: The sum of the short anagen hairs and the telogen hairs was 50.3% in anterior parietal area, whereas it was 31.6% in occipital area(p<0.0l). Conclusion: Hair follicles in anterior scalp appear to be more vulnerable than occipital scalp in the acute telogen effluvium.

Keyword

Classic acute telogen effluvium; Regional difference

MeSH Terms

Diagnosis
Hair Follicle*
Hair*
Rabeprazole*
Scalp

Cited by  1 articles

Localized Telogen Effluvium Following Hair Transplantation
Seung-Hee Loh, Bark-Lynn Lew, Woo-Young Sim
Ann Dermatol. 2018;30(2):214-217.    doi: 10.5021/ad.2018.30.2.214.

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