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Hello There and Welcome!

Let me start by introducing myself.

I am Dr Les Blackstock and Hair has become my passion.

I am a qualified physician and through the years have been progressing my clinic practice through physical development training with high level sports training with elite athletes and the military to psychological training in psychiatry to treatment of skin cancers to assistance with physical appearance with Botilium Toxin treatments and dermal fillers and laser or light therapy. I have enjoyed success and have gained many qualifications but have lacked a passion in my work. During my professional career I have harbored my own clinical problem. I suffer from a hair loss problem. It is called Alopecia Areata Barbae, which means that my facial hair grows with large areas with no hair growth. Oh the shame! I have been "outed" for my closet hair loss, how can I ever hold my head, or at least my beard in public again with people invading into my personal space to peering at me to see my hirsute shortcomings.

I am well educated and feel that my life is reasonably well adjusted with a loving wife, several children who appear to like my company, good health, good friends and family that still talk to me. However, I still feel that my small hair problem is very significant. I am lucky though my father at 75 has a head full of still mostly black hair. So chance meeting and slow evolution has brought me to a part where my working passion is emerging into hair. I am positioning my self to change my professional focus towards hair. I am in negotiation to pursue advanced study at a Masters or PhD level and if I can eventually make some money from this passion I’ll be happy.

The site map will help you to see what you can get for free from the site and consider the blog to gain more knowledge.

If you want to get an update of when I make a blogs entry or update the site or get any saving offers that some my way all you have to do to get started is email me at les@hairdoctor.com.au and tell me your about yourself and I’ll keep you on my mailing list.

These are links to companies that I have contractual relationships with and I endorse their attitude to a complete service for hair problems.

On the humorous side why don’t you consider these things, with my thanks to Wikipedia:

BALDNESS FOLKLORE

There are many myths regarding the possible causes of baldness and its relationship with one's virility, intelligence, etc.

  • "You inherit baldness from your mother's father."

Research suggests that the gene for the androgen receptor, which is significant in determining probability for hair loss, is located on the X chromosome and so is always inherited from the mother's side. There is a 50% chance that a person shares the same X chromosome as their maternal grandfather. Because women have two X chromosomes, they will have two copies of the androgen receptor gene while men only have one. However research has also shown that a person with a balding father also has a significantly greater chance of experiencing hair loss.

  • "Intellectual activity or psychological problems can cause baldness."

This myth probably was inspired by the fact that the human brain is located inside the skull, very close and just below where hair grows, and so it was thought that the use and abuse as well as mental disease could have negative effect on hair growth and number. It may also be due to the fact that cholesterol is involved in the process of neurogenesis and also the base material from which the body ultimately manufactures DHT. While the notion that bald men are more intelligent may lack credibility in the modern world, in the ancient world if a person was bald it was likely that he had an adequate amount of fat in his diet. Thus, his mental development was probably not stunted by malnutrition during his crucial formative years, he was more likely to be wealthy, and also have had access to a formal education. However a sedentary lifestyle is less likely to correlate with intelligence in the modern world, and dietary fat content is less strongly linked to economic class in developed countries.

This is sometimes used as a stereotype in films, where the more intellectual or rather frustrated characters are most usually portrayed as bald and generally unattractive, as opposed to the main characters which are usually portrayed as attractive, fit, mentally stable and generally with no apparent hair problems.

This same myth normally extends to considering people having intellectual jobs more prone to baldness problems compared to manual labourers, sometimes further extending the myth to male university teachers and students when compared to manual workers of the same age.] The myth is suspect because counter examples can be found in any case.

There is evidence, confirmed by cross-cultural studies, for an association between androgen levels and intellectual ability. These findings are controversial due to their implications regarding psychology and gender.

Total testosterone exhibits a positive relation to tactual-spatial abilities and to the degree of lateralization. Total testosterone is negatively correlated with verbal fluency. Testosterone in the saliva is also significantly positively correlated to tactual-spatial test scores and, in addition, to field independence. DHT and the ratio DHT/total testosterone are positively related to verbal fluency and negatively to the degree of lateralization of tactual-spatial performance.

  • "Baldness can be caused by emotional stress, sexual frustration etc."

Emotional stressors has been shown to accelerate baldness in genetically susceptible individuals.

Stress due to sleep deprivation in military recruits lowered testosterone levels, but is not noted to have effected SHBG.

Thus, stress due to sleep deprivation in fit males is unlikely to elevate DHT. Whether it can cause hair loss by some other mechanism is not clear.

  • "Bald men are more "virile" or sexually active than others."

Levels of free testosterone are strongly linked to libido and also DHT levels, but unless free testosterone is virtually non-existent levels have not been shown to affect virility. Men with androgenic alopecia are more likely to have a higher baseline of free androgens. However sexual activity is multifactorial, and androgenic profile is also not the only determining factor in baldness. Additionally, because hair loss is progressive and free testosterone declines with age, a person's hairline may be more indicative of their past than present disposition.

  • "Shaving hair makes it grow back stronger"

Proposed as a popular remedy against baldness, it's very probably just an illusion similar to the one perceived after shaving one's beard or moustache. Shaving one's head doesn't increase the number of healthy hair present on the scalp, and, after the remaining hair has grown a few millimetres, no enhancement in thickness or overall quality can be observed.

  • "Frequent ejaculation causes baldness"

There are many misconceptions about what can help prevent hair loss, one of these being that frequent ejaculation may have an influence on MPB. While ejaculation significantly lowers levels of relaxin (a 5-alpha reductase inhibitor) in a male's body and causes testosterone levels to temporarily elevate, the claim that frequent ejaculations can cause baldness is often viewed with scepticism. Higher free testosterone levels may correlate with both hair loss and increased sex drive in predisposed individuals.

  • "Standing on one's head alleviates baldness"

The "blood-flow" theory, which led men to stand on their heads in the 1980's, can be found in the advertising for many of the fake hair-loss treatments for sale on the Internet. While Minoxidil is a vasodilator and is speculated to work, in part, by increasing blood flow to hair follicles, there is no evidence that standing on one's head can alleviate baldness.

  • "Tight hats cause baldness."

This one probably started in the military where young men entering the service were required to wear hats and soon showed signs of going bald, or at least of hair thinning. This is due to coincidental timing. The age that young men enter the military is also the same age that male pattern hair loss begins. This is due to dihydrotestosterone, not hats. Hats do cause hair breakage and, to a lesser degree, split ends. Since hats are not washed as frequently as other clothing, they can also lead to scalp uncleanliness and possible P. ovale contamination in men with naturally oily scalps.

TRIVIA

  • John D. Rockefeller had an extreme case of alopecia that caused him to lose all of the hair on his face, including his eyebrows and eyelashes
  • Actor Patrick Stewart lost most of his hair to male-pattern baldness by age 19 (His natural "horse-shoe" of remaining hair can be seen in the film L.A. Story, along with his numerous appearances as Captain Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek).
  • Eunuchs rarely go bald, due to to reduced hormone levels.
  • Baldness is not only a human trait. Some other primates, such as Chimpanzees, stump-tailed macaques, and South American nakari show progressive thinning of the hair on the scalp after adolescence. Adult stump-tailed macaques, in fact, are commonly used in laboratories for the testing of hair-regrowth treatments.
  • The different predecessors of Old World and New World vultures convergently evolved a bald head, preventing feathers from retaining material from the vulture's diet of rotting meat, as well as helping in heat regulation.


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