Getting a diagnosis of alopecia
After finding a patch or noticing a lot of hair falling out, some of the young people we talked to and their parents booked an...
There are different types of alopecia, varying in terms of causes, severity (how much hair falls out), patterns of hair loss, the usual age it starts and body parts affected.
Most of the people we talked to had alopecia areata, which is often used as an umbrella name for a spectrum (range) of types: areata, totalis and universalis. Because alopecia areata is a spectrum, many people had hair loss ‘in between’ these named points. Some people found that their alopecia changed along the spectrum over time.
For this project, we didn’t talk to anyone whose alopecia was caused by chemotherapy (cancer treatment). No one described themselves as having androgenetic alopecia (male- and female- pattern balding), which is usually thought of as affecting middle-aged people but not always, or telogen effluvium (general thinning of hair). None of the people we talked to identified themselves as having the subtype of scarring alopecia (when the hair follicles are damaged beyond repair, usually due to another underlying illness). A couple of people initially thought pulling their hair too tightly when styling it had caused their hair to fall out, which is known as traction alopecia. Hannah worried she had pulled her hair out straightening and brushing it “too much” but, “looking back on it, the kind of patterning of it and where they were… They weren’t just kind of like traction alopecia or anything.”
Alopecia areata is a spectrum which is sometimes divided into particular subtypes based on the amount of hair loss and body locations affected:
Some people knew which of these types their hair loss was closest to because doctors had told them or they had learnt about it online; others referred to themselves as having alopecia or alopecia areata in general terms.
The type of alopecia and extent of hair loss was important to some people because of:
After finding a patch or noticing a lot of hair falling out, some of the young people we talked to and their parents booked an...
The main place people talked about having alopecia was the scalp. Other areas of the body where hairs grow can be affected too, including: the...