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Genomics 2003 Jan;81(1):6-14

Curly bare (cub), a new mouse mutation on chromosome 11 causing skin and hair abnormalities, and a modifier gene (mcub) on chromosome 5.


In the outcrossing of a new recessive mouse mutation causing hair loss, a new wavy-coated phenotype appeared. The two distinct phenotypes were shown to be alternative manifestations of the same gene mutation and attributable to a single modifier locus. The new mutation, curly bare (cub), was mapped to distal Chr 11 and the modifier (mcub) was mapped to Chr 5. When homozygous for the recessive mcub allele, cub/cub mice appear hairless. A single copy of the dominant Mcub allele confers a full, curly coat in cub/cub mice. Reciprocal transfer of full-thickness skin grafts between mutant and control animals showed that the skin phenotype was tissue autonomous. The hairless cub/cub mcub/mcub mice show normal contact sensitivity responses to oxazolone. The similarity of the wavy coat phenotype to those of Tgfa and Egfr mutations and the map positions of cub and mcub suggest candidate genes that interact in the EGF receptor signal transduction pathway.


Dermatol Surg 2002 Oct;28(10):894-900; discussion 900

The potential role of minoxidil in the hair transplantation setting.


BACKGROUND: Over the last decade surgical management of hair loss has become an increasingly popular and satisfying procedure for both men and women, as innovations in donor harvesting, graft size, and hairline design have resulted in consistently natural-appearing hair restoration. OBJECTIVE: In addition, a better understanding of the regulation of the hair-growth cycle has led to advances in the pharmacologic treatment of androgenetic alopecia. METHODS: Currently there are two U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved agents that promote hair regrowth: over-the-counter topical minoxidil solution for men and women and prescription oral finasteride tablets for men. In October 2001, a group of 11 international experts on hair loss and hair transplantation convened to review the physiology and effects of pharmacologic treatments of hair loss and to discuss the value of administering topical minoxidil therapy as an adjunct to hair transplantation. RESULTS: This article presents the key findings and consensus points among the participants, including their current use of pharmacologic treatments, strategies for optimal results both pre- and postsurgery, and the importance of realistic patient expectations and compliance. CONCLUSIONS: Based on the surgeons' clinical experience, the use of approved hair regrowth agents in hair transplant patients with viable but suboptimally functioning follicles in the region to be transplanted can increase hair density, speed regrowth in transplanted follicles, and complement the surgical result by slowing down or stopping further hair loss.


J Am Acad Dermatol 2002 Nov;47(5):795

Female pattern hair loss.


In this issue of the Journal (pages 733-9), Shum et al1 describe 4 female patients with increased androgens whose central scalp hair loss responded to finasteride. This is an important observation and one that highlights why the term androgenetic or androgenic alopecia, as used to describe the hereditary pattern balding of men, should be replaced with the term female pattern hair loss when applied to women.2 It is clear that only a small but distinct subset of women with central scalp pattern hair loss, such as the patients presented in the report by Shum et al, has signs of hyperandrogenism such as acne, hirsutism, and irregular periods with or without elevation of serum androgens. Therefore these women may have hair loss resulting from a different mechanism and may respond differently to treatments targeted at androgen blockade than women with a similar type of hair loss but without evidence of hyperandrogenism. Certainly these women with hyperandrogenemia may develop, in contradistinction to those without hyperandrogenemia, a Hamilton pattern of hair loss (male pattern baldness). Many of these women may, on more careful evaluation, have polycystic ovarian syndrome.

It is not surprising that a 5-reductase inhibitor such as finasteride, which has documented efficacy in men with androgenetic alopecia3,4 and has been shown to advantageously affect hirsutism,5,6 may cause hair growth in women with female pattern hair loss and hyperandrogenism. The fact that finasteride has not previously been shown to induce hair growth in postmenopausal women with “androgenetic alopecia”7 speaks for (1) adoption of different terminology for this type of hair loss in women and (2) separate evaluation of the different subgroups of women with female pattern hair loss as recently described,2 that is, early onset with and without hyperandrogenemia and late onset/postmenopausal with and without hyperandrogenemia. We should not be too quick to rule out efficacy of a potential therapeutic agent in all women with female pattern hair loss without first testing it in all the various subsets of women.

Clearly, finasteride may be an effective treatment for women with early-onset female pattern hair loss and hyperandrogenemia, but definitive results would require a large, well-controlled trial. Such a trial would likely necessitate inclusion of a “placebo” run-in phase with an oral contraceptive, both to protect these women of child-bearing potential from getting pregnant while taking a drug known to cause genital abnormalities in male fetuses and to rule out any effect from the oral contraceptive alone on female pattern hair loss (a study that needs to be conducted in any case). Anecdotal reports, such as that presented by Shum et al,1 should ignite interest in evaluating finasteride and other 5-reductase inhibitors, either type II or combination type I/II, in women with female pattern hair loss, a group of patients whose current treatment options are extremely limited.


Eur J Endocrinol 2002 Sep;147(3):357-61

An endocrinopathy characterized by dysfunction of the pituitary-adrenal axis and alopecia universalis: supporting the entity of a triple H syndrome.


We demonstrate the rare disorder of triple H syndrome in a 25-year-old man. He was pointed out as having short stature, at -5.9 s.d., and diagnosed as GH deficient at 6 years old. Approximately a year ago, he noticed systematic hair loss. He lost body weight by 7 kg during the last half year. He was admitted to Jichi Medical School Hospital because of unconsciousness. Physical findings showed disturbance of consciousness with Japan Coma Scale I-3. He had emaciation and alopecia universalis. Laboratory findings showed plasma glucose was as low as 1.11 mmol/l. GH and ACTH deficiency with hypoadrenocorticism were clarified. His intelligence was in the low normal range with a WAIS IQ of 70, and anterograde amnesia was suggested in the presence of a little, but not significant, morphological change in the hippocampus on a magnetic resonance imaging scan. Replacement by a physiological dose of hydrocortisone normalized plasma glucose, and restored body weight and growth of hair during the 7 month therapeutic period. The present finding strongly supports a clinical entity of triple H syndrome, including ACTH deficiency, alopecia universalis and anterograde amnesia, and that there may be some variation of the triad among the subjects.


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