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Hair loss affects both sexes. Men and women both take a hit to the thickness of their hair and the amount of hair,
as time passes. However, the type of hair loss identified as inherited or pattern baldness affects many men
more than it does women. About a quarter of men start to go bald by the time they reach their thirtieth birthday.
More than half are bald or have balding pattern by the time they reach sixty.
Hair loss in the form of typical male pattern baldness involves a receding hairline and thinning around the top of
the head, sometimes accompanied by bald spots. Ultimately, a person may be left with only a horseshoe
shaped pattern of hair going around the side of their head like a sweatband. Male-pattern baldness is correlated
with heredity, as we’ve all been at family functions where the wise person points out that a man tends to inherit
the hair loss characteristics of his mother’s father. Well, whether that’s true or not, male-pattern baldness
appears to require the male hormone testosterone. If a man is not able to produce testosterone, whether for
medical reasons, genetic abnormalities, or even castration, they do not exhibit typical male-pattern baldness.
Although women may also experience hair loss because of factors such as genetics, age and the presence of
male hormones that can increase following menopause. However, the pattern is not the same as in men.
Female pattern baldness generally involves a thinning throughout the scalp rather than patterns of hair loss over
the front of the head, as in a receding hair line, or a bald spot on the back of the head. more about hair loss and
hari restoration