Unwanted hair growth article

From member lagirl: “I found a very good article on all the possible causes of excessive hair growth, including medical conditions and medications. Maybe you can post this in a sticky on both LHR and Electrolysis forums. Can probably help some people determine what they have or IF they have something.”

Excessive Hairiness

Basics

The medical term for excessive hairiness is hirsutism. The term is usually applied to excessive hairiness in women. In women, hirsutism appears as dark, visible, and often abundant hair growth in a male-type pattern. The hairs usually occur on the face, chest, abdomen, upper pubic triangle between the groin and navel, inner thighs, and back. Hirsutism occurs in 5% to 10% of women.

Hirsutism may be caused by medical conditions that cause the body to have an excess of certain hormones, or by some medications. Hirsuitism is sometimes linked to changes that make the body more masculine (virilization), which can happen to both males and females. Signs of virilization include deepening of the voice, increased muscle mass, decreased breast size, enlarged genitals, and increased libido. Hirsutism linked to virulization is a concern and should prompt a visit to a physician.

Some ethnic groups normally have more body hair than others. Women of Mediterranean, Middle-Eastern, Hispanic, or African-American ancestry tend to have more body hair than women of other ethnicities. Regardless of how pronounced or minimal her body hair, if a woman is bothered by unusual hairiness she should see a doctor.

Treatment for hirsutism consists of lifestyle changes, medication, and physical removal of unwanted hair. Losing weight and getting exercise can add to the benefits of drug therapy, since obesity has been associated with an increase in the male hormones that can cause hirsutism. Medication alone is not usually enough; some people with hirsutism likely will want to have their hair physically removed as well.

Causes

Several medical conditions can cause the growth of unwanted dark, visible hair.

  • Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), the most common cause of hirsutism, occurs when the body overproduces male hormones (androgens). Polycystic ovary syndrome may cause decreased menstruation, unusual growth of cells in the ovaries (ovarian hyperplasia), unusually high levels of blood fats (hyperlipemia), glucose intolerance or resistance to insulin (diabetes), obesity, and a predisposition to heart disease. These symptoms often develop before puberty.
  • Cyst or tumor of the ovary. Cysts and tumors are abnormal growths in the body. When they occur on the ovary, they can cause a hormonal imbalance, leading to hirsutism.
  • Adrenal gland disorders. The adrenal gland produces hormones that affect many bodily processes. Conditions that interfere with the adrenal gland’s normal function can upset a body’s hormonal balance, and lead to hirsutism. Cancer of the adrenal gland is one such condition. Adrenal hyperplasia—an increase in the number of cells of the adrenal gland—is another such condition. Cushing’s syndrome, characterized by obesity around the midsection, muscle weakness, altered mood, purple stretch marks, and easy bruising, is caused by the production of an excess amount of the hormone cortisol by the adrenals.
  • Acromegaly. Also known as gigantism, acromegaly causes enlargement of the head, face, hands, feet, and upper torso. It is due to the excess production of growth hormone by the pituitary gland.
  • Increased prolactin hormone levels (hyperprolactinemia). Prolactin is a hormone that is involved in milk secretion from the breast. Increased levels of this hormone can lead to hirsuitism, as well as milk leakage from the breast and menstrual cycle disturbances.
  • Deficiency of 21-hydroxylase , an enzyme that is needed to produce cortisol (a steroid that maintains blood sugar levels and maintains body fluids and electrolytes) and aldesterone (a hormone that maintains the body’s salt and water balance.)
  • Severe insulin resistance or diabetes causes the ovaries to increase their production of androgens.

In addition, there are non-medical conditions that are linked to hirsutism, including obesity, pregnancy, and menopause. These conditions are all similar in that they cause production of hormones (usually androgens like testosterone) that can increase hair growth. In the case of pregnancy, the hair growth tends to stop once the child is delivered. In the cases of obesity or menopause, the hair growth will be controlled once the problem is addressed by weight loss or hormone therapy.

Taking certain medications may cause or contribute to hirsutism [Table 1]. The underlying reason for hair growth often has to do with a problem in the body’s production of hormones. For example, if the body produces an excess of androgens (male hormones), the result will often be increased hair growth. At the same time, drugs that are hormones or that stimulate the production of hormones can also stimulate hair growth. Classes of drugs commonly understood to cause hair growth include the following:

  • Sex hormones . These are hormones such as estrogens or androgens that are produced by the ovaries, testicles, or the adrenal gland. Androgens are hormones, such as testosterone, that drive male sex characteristics.
  • Steroids . The adrenal glands naturally produce steroid hormones to help control stress, maintain body mass and muscle tone, and perform other essential functions. If someone takes synthetic steroids, the drugs will prevent the adrenals from making their own supply. At the same time, if a large dose is required, the drugs may cause hair growth and other bodily changes, exactly as if the adrenals were producing too much hormone. This effect, however, applies more to anabolic or androgenic steroids than to glucocorticoids.
  • Drugs that stimulate the pituitary or adrenal glands . The pituitary gland is located in the head and controls other organs in the body that make hormones, including the ovaries and the adrenals. Some drugs can stimulate the pituitary, causing it in turn to signal other hormone-producing glands.
  • Anti-seizure medications . The mechanism is not clear, but anti-seizure medications tend to have hirsutism as a side effect.

Sometimes hirsutism can occur without any underlying cause. This is called idiopathic hirsutism.

Table 1. Medications That Can Cause or Contribute to Excess Hair Growth

Drug Use
Sex hormones
Androgens and estrogens (varied) Combination of male and female hormones often prescribed for symptoms of menopause
Androgenic progestin (varied) Hormone used for a number of reasons, including regulation of the menstrual cycle
Contraceptives (varied) Prevent pregnancy
Danazol (Danocrine) Used to treat endometriosis, cysts in the breast, breast cancer, and hereditary swelling of parts of the body (angioedema)
Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) Prescribed in older people to help offset a decrease in lean body and bone mass.
Testosterone (Android, Testoderm, Androgel) Male hormone sometimes used to treat breast cancer in women
Steroids
Anabolic steroids (Primobolan, Parabolan) Prescribed to help rebuild tissue after a serious injury or illness, to treat some anemias, to treat some kinds of breast cancer in women, and to treat hereditary swelling of various parts of the body (angioedema)
Corticosteroids (varied) Used to treat inflammation-based diseases like asthma and lupus, and to prevent rejection of transplanted organs
Medications affecting the adrenal or pituitary gland
Aminoglutethimide (Cytadren) Treats tumors that affect the adrenal cortex.
Corticotropin (Acthargel) Stimulates production of hormones by the adrenal gland
Metyrapone (Metopirone) Used to test for proper function of adrenal glands
Anti-seizure medications
Acetazolamide (Diamox) Used to treat glaucoma, some epileptic seizures, and to lessen the effects of climbing to high altitudes
Phenytoin (Dilantin) Treats epileptic seizures
Valproate (Depakote) Used to treat epileptic seizures and bipolar disorder
Miscellaneous medications
Cyclosporin (Ciclosporin) Prevents rejection of transplanted organs, treats rheumatoid arthritis
Diazoxide (Hyperstat) Treats low blood sugar (hypoglycemia)
Hexachlorobenzene Pesticide that may be ingested with contaminated food, water or air. Although this is not a medication, when it is accidentally ingested it can cause hirsutism.
Metoclopramide (Reglan) Treats symptoms of a stomach problem called diabetic gastroparesis, treats heartburn in patients with esophageal injury due to backflow of gastric acid, used to diagnose some problems of the stomach or intestines
Minoxidil (Rogaine) Treats high blood pressure, and can be used to promote hair growth
Penicillamine (Cuprimine) Used for treatment of Wilson’s disease (excessive copper in the body), rheumatoid arthritis, and lead poisoning. Prevents kidney stones
Phenobarbital (Luminal) Prescribed for hot flashes and migraine headaches
Phenothiazine derivatives (varied) Antihistamines to relieve allergy or hay fever symptoms
Psoralens (varied) Used, along with ultraviolet light, to treat vitiligo (a disease in which skin color is lost) and psoriasis (a skin condition characterized by red, scaly patches.) Sometimes used to treat white blood cells in a type of lymphoma

Symptoms

Hirsutism is the presence of dark, visible hairs in a male pattern. It is often accompanied by symptoms of infertility or irregular menstruation. Hirsutism is characterized by dark, thick hair on the upper lip, chest, abdomen, and back. These hairs are different than the fine “baby” hairs that most women have on their upper lip, chin, breasts, or stomach.

Risk Factors

Women with a family history of polycystic ovary syndrome or congenital (familial) adrenal hyperplasia are at risk for developing hirsutism. Both of these diseases are thought to have a hereditary, or genetic component. Congenital adrenal hyperplasia means excessive growth (and usually excessive hormone production) by both adrenal glands, a problem that is passed down through generations of a particular family. If your family is prone to any of these conditions or to hirsutism, see your doctor for early diagnosis. If caught before symptoms appear, therapy can correct the underlying problem and prevent hirsutism from developing. If the underlying causes of hirsutism are not treated, longer-term health risks due to ongoing hormone excess may arise. These include diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure (hypertension), hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis), and endometrial cancer. In addition, many women with hirsutism suffer from depression.

The extensive use of androgens or steroids can cause excess or unusual hair growth. Although these drugs are prescribed for a number of conditions, in some cases they can drive certain bodily changes, including increased hair growth. This is true whether they are being used illicitly or under the supervision of a doctor.

Postmenopausal women are more likely to have unwanted hair growth. This is because their ovaries are no longer active. Ovarian hormones such as estrogen counteract and stabilize the activity of androgens produced by other glands in the body.

Diagnosis

Your doctor will ask a series of questions to help diagnose the cause of your hirsutism. Your doctor to will want to know the history of your condition, as well as your family’s health history. Tell your doctor at what age your symptoms first appeared, and whether the hirsutism developed quickly or over a long period of time. Other questions your doctor may ask include:

  • Have you experienced signs of virilization such as increased sexual desire, increased muscle bulk, voice deepening, decreased breast size, or clitoral englargement?
  • Have you recently gained a lot of weight?
  • Do you smoke?
  • Do you exercise regularly?
  • Do you have trouble with menstruation, such as very light periods or missing your period altogether?
  • Have you ever been pregnant?
  • Are you taking birth control pills?
  • Do you experience symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes?
  • Are you secreting milk even though you are not breastfeeding?
  • Are you taking medication known to cause hirsutism?

Your doctor will check your blood pressure and weight, and will perform a physical exam. During your exam, your doctor will help you determine the extent and pattern of hair growth. He or she will also look for other signs that might offer clues to the underlying disorder. In particular, your doctor will be looking for and need your help to see if you have signs of virilization indicating a problem that needs to be addressed immediately. These include thinning of the hair at the front of your scalp; an enlarged clitoris; bulky muscles, particularly in the shoulder area; and decreased breast size. Signs of Cushing’s syndrome (high levels of the hormone cortisol in the blood), like thin skin, stretch marks, dilated vessels, or purplish patches caused by blood under the skin, are also a concern.

You will likely undergo lab tests to help diagnose the specific cause of your hirsutism. There is a variety of blood and imaging tests commonly used to help diagnose the cause of hirsutism:

  • Blood tests . These might include small amounts of blood being drawn with a needle to test for elevated levels of hormones like testosterone and its precursors; blood sugar levels; high levels of cholesterol or other lipids (fats); or Cushing’s syndrome (increased levels of hormone cortisol).
  • Ultrasound . This is a non-invasive test that uses sound waves to create images of organs such as the ovaries. It can be used to look for tumors and other abnormalities.
  • CT (computed tomography) or MRI (magnetic resonance imaging). These are sophisticated, non-invasive imaging tests similar to radiographs or X-rays. They provide detailed photographs of the body that can be used to detect adrenal tumors, for example. The adrenals sit on top of either kidney and cannot be clearly seen by ultrasound.
  • Catheterization of the ovarian and adrenal veins to measure androgen levels may be used if your doctor is having a difficult time diagnosing the cause of your hirsutism. This is an invasive test performed by threading a small tube into the veins. It provides a clearer definition of the levels of sex hormones in the blood.

Prevention and Screening

Hirsutism can be prevented in some cases. If you have more body hair because of your ethnicity, there is not much you can do other than remove the unwanted hair physically. However, other forms of hirsutism may be prevented with the help of your doctor. Share information about any drugs or herbal medications you are taking, and share information about family members who have suffered from this condition. Early detection and treatment can prevent many of the problems connected to hirsutism.

Treatment

Self Care

Watch your weight and get exercise. Obesity has been linked to an increase in the male hormones that can cause hirsutism. In addition, medications for conditions related to hirsutism are not as effective in overweight women. Therefore, if you are obese, consider losing weight. Develop and start an exercise program, with the help of your doctor if necessary.

Use physical hair-removal methods. Contrary to popular belief, temporary hair-removal methods such as shaving, waxing, tweezing, and depilatory creams do not cause hair to grow back coarser and darker than the original hair. Permanent hair-removal methods include electrolysis (use of a small shock to destroy the hair follicle), intense pulsed light (use of a flashlamp to destroy the hair follicle), and laser phototherapy (lasers are targeted at hair follicles).

Drug Therapy

Your doctor is the best source of information on the drug treatment choices available to you.

Other Therapies

Certain topical medications can be used to control hirsutism. For example, Eflornithine hydrochloride cream (Vaniqa) slows facial hair growth. The cream takes four to eight weeks to cause improvement, and hair growth returns after discontinuing the cream.

Surgery

Adrenal tumors, some ovarian tumors, and some benign pituitary tumors (adenomas) are generally treated by surgery. Oophorectomy (removal of the ovaries) may be an option for women approaching menopause whose hirsutism is caused by ovarian abnormalities.

Alternative Medicine

Some herbal remedies are available that claim to treat hirsutism. However, none have been proven. Talk to your doctor if you are considering taking herbal remedies or other forms of alternative medicine. Some herbs that have been used to treat hirsutism include:

  • Shakuyaku-kanzo-to : an herb that may help to reduce testosterone levels in women.
  • Saw palmetto : an herb said by some to be useful in inhibiting the effects of testosterone.

Prognosis

Hirsutism caused by a hormonal disorder will usually not go away entirely. However, hirsutism that is caused by a curable condition has a positive prognosis. When the condition that caused the hirsutism—such as Cushing’s syndrome or a tumor—is treated, the hirsutism should resolve and the hairiness should diminish. However, this can take a number of months. Conditions related to hormone production are likely to improve with drug therapy, but the hirsutism does not always disappear completely. If a tendency for hirsutism is recognized early, drug therapies can help hold off the actual development of the condition.

Follow-up

You may need to continue drug therapy, lifestyle changes, and physical hair removal on an ongoing basis. See your doctor every three to six months.

source: pdr health dot com/patient_education/BHG01EN13.shtml

2 Likes

Hi Andrea,

After reading through the article, it does present a very good overview of hirsutism in women, and for the most part, it is in line with other information I have on file as far as the root causes and treatments for excess hair growth.

However, I did find 2 glaring errors as follows:

Use physical hair-removal methods. Contrary to popular belief, temporary hair-removal methods such as shaving, waxing, tweezing , and depilatory creams do not cause hair to grow back coarser and darker than the original hair.

The inclusion of tweezing and waxing as non-stimulating methods of hair removal are definately incorrect. Any electrologist who has worked on eyebrows that have been tweezed for extensive lengths of time will know exactly what I am talking about.

Outside of this, it is an excellent source of information, athough quite limited in the number and types of drugs that have the potential to affect hair growth.

Joanne

yes, Joanie, completely agree there.

here’s another great article:

http://www.hormonehelpny.com/column/hormoneshair1.htm

uhuh. and you’re not advertising your site.

thanks for the article

Wait, so do you mean that waxing and tweezing does cause hair to grow back darker and coarser?
SOrry if this is a dumb question but I thought it didn’t :frowning:

Yes, it does cause hair to grow back thicker, darker, stronger, and in many cases, distorts the follicles so they don’t even grow straight anymore.

In some cases, in places like legs, and eyebrows, the scar tissue can build up and cause the hair to stop growing, but in the overwhelming number of body parts, darker, thicker, coarser, gnarlier hairs are the norm.

I agree, but I’m sure you will read and hear differing opinions on this subject.

I think it really varies by person, body area, etc. It can also be hard to tell if you start waxing for example when you’re still young and developing hair. I know of many women who have waxed their entire lives and never saw any increase in coarseness. I didn’t after waxing for 5-6 years religiously. My mom overplucked her eyebrows when she was younger, and now barely has any left. They haven’t grown back in the last 20 years, so I doubt they will. But there are others who do experience more growth after consistent waxing, especially on areas like the face.

Shaving definitely doesn’t do this btw. It’s been proven.

So wait, tweezing/etc. increases growth?

What increases growth in general?

In general, anything that increases the blood supply to the skin would tend to increase the thickness, and possibly the number of hairs, as hair is to blood as grass is to fertilizer. Also, anything that causes changes in the hormonal balance would also cause an increase in unwanted hair. This is one reason I tell any woman who will listen that Artificial Sweeteners are a great way to gain a problem that will keep me in business.

What is so great about this video?

This person is a regular spammer on another forum. Guess they found this one too. Andrea needs to remove.

Articles to read on hair growth and potential causes:

http://www.hormonehelpny.com/column/hormoneshair1.htm

http://www.laseawayhair.com/PCOS_files/frame.htm

The one below:

Excessive Hairiness
Diagnoses

Basics
The medical term for excessive hairiness is hirsutism. The term is usually applied to excessive hairiness in women. In women, hirsutism appears as dark, visible, and often abundant hair growth in a male-type pattern. The hairs usually occur on the face, chest, abdomen, upper pubic triangle between the groin and navel, inner thighs, and back. Hirsutism occurs in 5% to 10% of women.

Hirsutism may be caused by medical conditions that cause the body to have an excess of certain hormones, or by some medications. Hirsuitism is sometimes linked to changes that make the body more masculine (virilization), which can happen to both males and females. Signs of virilization include deepening of the voice, increased muscle mass, decreased breast size, enlarged genitals, and increased libido. Hirsutism linked to virulization is a concern and should prompt a visit to a physician.

Some ethnic groups normally have more body hair than others. Women of Mediterranean, Middle-Eastern, Hispanic, or African-American ancestry tend to have more body hair than women of other ethnicities. Regardless of how pronounced or minimal her body hair, if a woman is bothered by unusual hairiness she should see a doctor.

Treatment for hirsutism consists of lifestyle changes, medication, and physical removal of unwanted hair. Losing weight and getting exercise can add to the benefits of drug therapy, since obesity has been associated with an increase in the male hormones that can cause hirsutism. Medication alone is not usually enough; some people with hirsutism likely will want to have their hair physically removed as well.

Causes

Several medical conditions can cause the growth of unwanted dark, visible hair.

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), the most common cause of hirsutism, occurs when the body overproduces male hormones (androgens). Polycystic ovary syndrome may cause decreased menstruation, unusual growth of cells in the ovaries (ovarian hyperplasia), unusually high levels of blood fats (hyperlipemia), glucose intolerance or resistance to insulin (diabetes), obesity, and a predisposition to heart disease. These symptoms often develop before puberty.

Cyst or tumor of the ovary. Cysts and tumors are abnormal growths in the body. When they occur on the ovary, they can cause a hormonal imbalance, leading to hirsutism.

Adrenal gland disorders. The adrenal gland produces hormones that affect many bodily processes. Conditions that interfere with the adrenal gland’s normal function can upset a body’s hormonal balance, and lead to hirsutism. Cancer of the adrenal gland is one such condition.

Adrenal hyperplasia—an increase in the number of cells of the adrenal gland—is another such condition. Cushing’s syndrome, characterized by obesity around the midsection, muscle weakness, altered mood, purple stretch marks, and easy bruising, is caused by the production of an excess amount of the hormone cortisol by the adrenals.

Acromegaly. Also known as gigantism, acromegaly causes enlargement of the head, face, hands, feet, and upper torso. It is due to the excess production of growth hormone by the pituitary gland.

Increased prolactin hormone levels (hyperprolactinemia). Prolactin is a hormone that is involved in milk secretion from the breast. Increased levels of this hormone can lead to hirsuitism, as well as milk leakage from the breast and menstrual cycle disturbances.

Deficiency of 21-hydroxylase, an enzyme that is needed to produce cortisol (a steroid that maintains blood sugar levels and maintains body fluids and electrolytes) and aldesterone (a hormone that maintains the body’s salt and water balance.)

Severe insulin resistance or diabetes causes the ovaries to increase their production of androgens.

In addition, there are non-medical conditions that are linked to hirsutism, including obesity, pregnancy, and menopause. These conditions are all similar in that they cause production of hormones (usually androgens like testosterone) that can increase hair growth. In the case of pregnancy, the hair growth tends to stop once the child is delivered. In the cases of obesity or menopause, the hair growth will be controlled once the problem is addressed by weight loss or hormone therapy.

Taking certain medications may cause or contribute to hirsutism [Table 1]. The underlying reason for hair growth often has to do with a problem in the body’s production of hormones. For example, if the body produces an excess of androgens (male hormones), the result will often be increased hair growth. At the same time, drugs that are hormones or that stimulate the production of hormones can also stimulate hair growth.

Classes of drugs commonly understood to cause hair growth include the following:

Sex hormones. These are hormones such as estrogens or androgens that are produced by the ovaries, testicles, or the adrenal gland. Androgens are hormones, such as testosterone, that drive male sex characteristics.

Steroids. The adrenal glands naturally produce steroid hormones to help control stress, maintain body mass and muscle tone, and perform other essential functions. If someone takes synthetic steroids, the drugs will prevent the adrenals from making their own supply. At the same time, if a large dose is required, the drugs may cause hair growth and other bodily changes, exactly as if the adrenals were producing too much hormone. This effect, however, applies more to anabolic or androgenic steroids than to glucocorticoids.

Drugs that stimulate the pituitary or adrenal glands. The pituitary gland is located in the head and controls other organs in the body that make hormones, including the ovaries and the adrenals. Some drugs can stimulate the pituitary, causing it in turn to signal other hormone-producing glands.

Anti-seizure medications. The mechanism is not clear, but anti-seizure medications tend to have hirsutism as a side effect.

Sometimes hirsutism can occur without any underlying cause. This is called idiopathic hirsutism.

Table 1. Medications That Can Cause or Contribute to Excess Hair Growth

Drug Use

Sex hormones

Androgens and estrogens (varied) Combination of male and female hormones often prescribed for symptoms of menopause

Androgenic progestin (varied) Hormone used for a number of reasons, including regulation of the menstrual cycle

Contraceptives (varied)
Prevent pregnancy

Danazol (Danocrine)
Used to treat endometriosis, cysts in the breast, breast cancer, and hereditary swelling of parts of the body (angioedema)

Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS)
Prescribed in older people to help offset a decrease in lean body and bone mass.

Testosterone (Android, Testoderm, Androgel)
Male hormone sometimes used to treat breast cancer in women

Steroids
Anabolic steroids (Primobolan, Parabolan)
Prescribed to help rebuild tissue after a serious injury or illness, to treat some anemias, to treat some kinds of breast cancer in women, and to treat hereditary swelling of various parts of the body (angioedema)

Corticosteroids (varied)
Used to treat inflammation-based diseases like asthma and lupus, and to prevent rejection of transplanted organs

Medications affecting the adrenal or pituitary gland
Aminoglutethimide (Cytadren) Treats tumors that affect the adrenal cortex.

Corticotropin (Acthargel)
Stimulates production of hormones by the adrenal gland

Metyrapone (Metopirone) Used to test for proper function of adrenal glands

Anti-seizure medications

Acetazolamide (Diamox)
Used to treat glaucoma, some epileptic seizures, and to lessen the effects of climbing to high altitudes

Phenytoin (Dilantin) Treats epileptic seizures

Valproate (Depakote) Used to treat epileptic seizures and bipolar disorder

Miscellaneous medications

Cyclosporin (Ciclosporin)
Prevents rejection of transplanted organs, treats rheumatoid arthritis

Diazoxide (Hyperstat) Treats low blood sugar (hypoglycemia)
Hexachlorobenzene

Pesticide that may be ingested with contaminated food, water or air. Although this is not a medication, when it is accidentally ingested it can cause hirsutism.

Metoclopramide (Reglan)
Treats symptoms of a stomach problem called diabetic gastroparesis, treats heartburn in patients with esophageal injury due to backflow of gastric acid, used to diagnose some problems of the stomach or intestines

Minoxidil (Rogaine)
Treats high blood pressure, and can be used to promote hair growth

Penicillamine (Cuprimine)
Used for treatment of Wilson’s disease (excessive copper in the body), rheumatoid arthritis, and lead poisoning. Prevents kidney stones

Phenobarbital (Luminal)
Prescribed for hot flashes and migraine headaches
Phenothiazine derivatives (varied) Antihistamines to relieve allergy or hay fever symptoms

Psoralens (varied)
Used, along with ultraviolet light, to treat vitiligo (a disease in which skin color is lost) and psoriasis (a skin condition characterized by red, scaly patches.) Sometimes used to treat white blood cells in a type of lymphoma

Symptoms

Hirsutism is the presence of dark, visible hairs in a male pattern. It is often accompanied by symptoms of infertility or irregular menstruation. Hirsutism is characterized by dark, thick hair on the upper lip, chest, abdomen, and back. These hairs are different than the fine “baby” hairs that most women have on their upper lip, chin, breasts, or stomach.

Risk Factors
Women with a family history of polycystic ovary syndrome or congenital (familial) adrenal hyperplasia are at risk for developing hirsutism. Both of these diseases are thought to have a hereditary, or genetic component. Congenital adrenal hyperplasia means excessive growth (and usually excessive hormone production) by both adrenal glands, a problem that is passed down through generations of a particular family. If your family is prone to any of these conditions or to hirsutism, see your doctor for early diagnosis. If caught before symptoms appear, therapy can correct the underlying problem and prevent hirsutism from developing. If the underlying causes of hirsutism are not treated, longer-term health risks due to ongoing hormone excess may arise. These include diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure (hypertension), hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis), and endometrial cancer. In addition, many women with hirsutism suffer from depression.

The extensive use of androgens or steroids can cause excess or unusual hair growth. Although these drugs are prescribed for a number of conditions, in some cases they can drive certain bodily changes, including increased hair growth. This is true whether they are being used illicitly or under the supervision of a doctor.

Postmenopausal women are more likely to have unwanted hair growth. This is because their ovaries are no longer active. Ovarian hormones such as estrogen counteract and stabilize the activity of androgens produced by other glands in the body.

Diagnosis
Your doctor will ask a series of questions to help diagnose the cause of your hirsutism. Your doctor to will want to know the history of your condition, as well as your family’s health history. Tell your doctor at what age your symptoms first appeared, and whether the hirsutism developed quickly or over a long period of time. Other questions your doctor may ask include:

Have you experienced signs of virilization such as increased sexual desire, increased muscle bulk, voice deepening, decreased breast size, or clitoral englargement?
Have you recently gained a lot of weight?
Do you smoke?
Do you exercise regularly?
Do you have trouble with menstruation, such as very light periods or missing your period altogether?
Have you ever been pregnant?
Are you taking birth control pills?
Do you experience symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes?
Are you secreting milk even though you are not breastfeeding?
Are you taking medication known to cause hirsutism?

Your doctor will check your blood pressure and weight, and will perform a physical exam. During your exam, your doctor will help you determine the extent and pattern of hair growth. He or she will also look for other signs that might offer clues to the underlying disorder. In particular, your doctor will be looking for and need your help to see if you have signs of virilization indicating a problem that needs to be addressed immediately. These include thinning of the hair at the front of your scalp; an enlarged clitoris; bulky muscles, particularly in the shoulder area; and decreased breast size. Signs of Cushing’s syndrome (high levels of the hormone cortisol in the blood), like thin skin, stretch marks, dilated vessels, or purplish patches caused by blood under the skin, are also a concern.

You will likely undergo lab tests to help diagnose the specific cause of your hirsutism. There is a variety of blood and imaging tests commonly used to help diagnose the cause of hirsutism:

Blood tests. These might include small amounts of blood being drawn with a needle to test for elevated levels of hormones like testosterone and its precursors; blood sugar levels; high levels of cholesterol or other lipids (fats); or Cushing’s syndrome (increased levels of hormone cortisol).
Ultrasound. This is a non-invasive test that uses sound waves to create images of organs such as the ovaries. It can be used to look for tumors and other abnormalities.

CT (computed tomography) or MRI (magnetic resonance imaging). These are sophisticated, non-invasive imaging tests similar to radiographs or X-rays. They provide detailed photographs of the body that can be used to detect adrenal tumors, for example. The adrenals sit on top of either kidney and cannot be clearly seen by ultrasound.

Catheterization of the ovarian and adrenal veins to measure androgen levels may be used if your doctor is having a difficult time diagnosing the cause of your hirsutism. This is an invasive test performed by threading a small tube into the veins. It provides a clearer definition of the levels of sex hormones in the blood.

Prevention and Screening
Hirsutism can be prevented in some cases. If you have more body hair because of your ethnicity, there is not much you can do other than remove the unwanted hair physically. However, other forms of hirsutism may be prevented with the help of your doctor. Share information about any drugs or herbal medications you are taking, and share information about family members who have suffered from this condition. Early detection and treatment can prevent many of the problems connected to hirsutism.

Treatment

Self Care

Watch your weight and get exercise. Obesity has been linked to an increase in the male hormones that can cause hirsutism. In addition, medications for conditions related to hirsutism are not as effective in overweight women. Therefore, if you are obese, consider losing weight. Develop and start an exercise program, with the help of your doctor if necessary.

Use physical hair-removal methods. Contrary to popular belief, temporary hair-removal methods such as shaving, waxing, tweezing, and depilatory creams do not cause hair to grow back coarser and darker than the original hair. Permanent hair-removal methods include electrolysis (use of a small shock to destroy the hair follicle), intense pulsed light (use of a flashlamp to destroy the hair follicle), and laser phototherapy (lasers are targeted at hair follicles).

Drug Therapy
Your doctor is the best source of information on the drug treatment choices available to you.

Other Therapies
Certain topical medications can be used to control hirsutism. For example, Eflornithine hydrochloride cream (Vaniqa) slows facial hair growth. The cream takes four to eight weeks to cause improvement, and hair growth returns after discontinuing the cream.

Surgery
Adrenal tumors, some ovarian tumors, and some benign pituitary tumors (adenomas) are generally treated by surgery. Oophorectomy (removal of the ovaries) may be an option for women approaching menopause whose hirsutism is caused by ovarian abnormalities.

Alternative Medicine
Some herbal remedies are available that claim to treat hirsutism. However, none have been proven. Talk to your doctor if you are considering taking herbal remedies or other forms of alternative medicine. Some herbs that have been used to treat hirsutism include:

Shakuyaku-kanzo-to: an herb that may help to reduce testosterone levels in women.
Saw palmetto: an herb said by some to be useful in inhibiting the effects of testosterone.

Prognosis
Hirsutism caused by a hormonal disorder will usually not go away entirely. However, hirsutism that is caused by a curable condition has a positive prognosis. When the condition that caused the hirsutism—such as Cushing’s syndrome or a tumor—is treated, the hirsutism should resolve and the hairiness should diminish. However, this can take a number of months. Conditions related to hormone production are likely to improve with drug therapy, but the hirsutism does not always disappear completely. If a tendency for hirsutism is recognized early, drug therapies can help hold off the actual development of the condition.

Follow-up
You may need to continue drug therapy, lifestyle changes, and physical hair removal on an ongoing basis. See your doctor every three to six months.

Thanks Andrea,
I am on androgen replacement therapy under Urologist supervision. I started laser hair removalfor two reasons. One, to follow the Androderm patch instructions(big improvement) and two, to get rid of excessive pubic hair. I’ve been at it for six months and it seems to be going well. However, my concern is the development of new hair. Will the removal treatments outpace the new hair that is produced by the testosterone? I’ve been on the patches for over two years and only the belly/pubic area has been affected. However, each laser treatment produces immediate results to prevent the pubes looking like those of a dog.

Hi,I’d like to read the article but the link isn’t working. It says, page cannot be found… strange.

Of course tweezing doesnt cause hair to grow stronger or thicker.

I know some of you are overly keen to sell your electrolysis services, but come on.

We all know someone who has tweezed their eyebrows into nothing, and now has to draw an eyebrow on. I myself had a bit of a monobrow, which I used to tweeze I now dont have to as tweezing weakens hair over a long time.

If shaving/buzzing causes regrowth then isn’t it misleading that laser technicians are telling their customers to do so prior to the treatments? Well, I think so!

JohnSheff - It really depends on the situation. If you are female and have facial hair due to hormone sensitivities, you can bet that any root removal will strengthen the follicle causing hairs to become thicker.

Hairlarious - I feel you do not understand hair growth, cycles and Laser treatment.