Evidence-based guides on hair loss stages, treatment options, transplant procedures, and recovery.

9 topic areas covering 2888 articles
Educational guides to common hair loss conditions, causes, symptoms, diagnosis conversations, treatment options, and when to seek medical care.
Educational guides to FUE, FUT, DHI, graft handling, recovery timelines, scarring tradeoffs, aftercare, and what to ask before hair transplant surgery.
Step-by-step hair loss assessment and planning guides covering photos, Norwood staging, consultations, costs, treatment options, and follow-up questions.
Cost breakdowns, clinic research guidance, medical tourism considerations, and location-specific hair transplant planning resources.
Evidence-aware education on minoxidil, finasteride, PRP, laser therapy, supplements, treatment timelines, side effects, and when to ask a clinician.
Detailed Norwood stage guides covering recession patterns, graft planning ranges, treatment timing, and questions to discuss with a qualified hair restoration clinician.
Research summaries on hair biology, androgenetic alopecia, emerging therapies, clinical studies, regulatory context, and evidence quality.
Side-by-side comparisons of treatments, procedures, tools, costs, recovery timelines, risks, and decision points for hair restoration planning.
Practical education on diet, stress, sleep, scalp care, styling habits, and lifestyle factors that can influence hair and scalp health.
Yes, topical minoxidil 2% and 5% are FDA-approved OTC for hair loss. Here's exactly what's available, what requires a prescription, and what the evidence...
Minoxidil is FDA-approved for women at 2% and widely used off-label at 5%. Learn the real risks, who should avoid it, and what studies show about safety.
Nutrafol contains some DHT-modulating ingredients, but it's not a DHT blocker like finasteride. Here's what the evidence says about each key compound.
Spironolactone blocks DHT receptors instead of lowering DHT levels. How it works, what the evidence shows, real doses, side effects, and who should skip it.
Telogen effluvium reverses on its own in most cases within 3 to 6 months once the trigger is removed. Here's what the research actually shows.
Yes, multiple alopecia treatments exist. FDA-approved options include minoxidil, finasteride, and baricitinib. This guide covers what works for each type.
Kirkland minoxidil costs $25-35 for a 6-month supply. Here's what the evidence says about whether it works, how it compares to Rogaine, and what to watch for.
Kirkland Signature minoxidil costs about $25 for a 6-month supply. Here's how it compares to Rogaine, what the studies say, and what to watch out for.
From hormones to alopecia, discover the 10 main causes of hair loss in women, which are reversible, and which treatments have real evidence behind them.
Yes, women get receding hairlines. Here are the 6 main causes, which FDA-approved treatments work, and honest advice on hairstyles that buy time.
Litfulo (ritlecitinib) regrew hair in 23% of patients at 24 weeks vs 2% on placebo. Here's what the FDA trial data really shows.
The Ludwig scale has 3 stages of female-pattern hair loss. Learn what each looks like, when to treat, and which treatments actually work. Backed by...