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Alopecia areata

Alopecia areata, also known as spot baldness, is a condition in which hair is lost from some or all areas of the body.[12][1] It often results in a few bald spots on the scalp, each about the size of a coin.[7] Psychological stress and illness are possible factors in bringing on alopecia areata in individuals at risk, but in most cases there is no obvious trigger.[7] People are generally otherwise healthy.[7] In a few cases, all the hair on the scalp is lost (alopecia totalis), or all body hair is lost (alopecia universalis). Hair loss can be permanent, or temporary.[7][1]

Alopecia areata
Other namesAlopecia Celsi, vitiligo capitis, Jonston's alopecia[1]
Alopecia areata seen on the back of the scalp
Pronunciation
SpecialtyDermatology Immunology[6]
SymptomsAreas of hair loss, usually on the scalp[7]
Usual onsetChildhood[7]
CausesAutoimmune[7]
Risk factorsFamily history, female sex, rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 diabetes, celiac disease[7][8][9]
Differential diagnosisTrichotillomania, alopecia mucinosa, postpartum alopecia[1]
TreatmentSunscreen, head coverings to protect from sun and cold[7]
Medicationtopical minoxidil[10] and triamcinolone injections[11]
PrognosisDoes not affect life expectancy[7][1]
Frequency~2% (US)[7]

Alopecia areata is believed to be an autoimmune disease resulting from a breach in the immune privilege of the hair follicles.[12][13] Risk factors include a family history of the condition.[7] Among identical twins, if one is affected, the other has about a 50% chance of also being affected.[7] The underlying mechanism involves failure by the body to recognize its own cells, with subsequent immune-mediated destruction of the hair follicle.[7]

No cure for the condition is known.[7] Some treatments, particularly triamcinolone injections and 5% minoxidil topical creams,[11][10] are effective in speeding hair regrowth.[7][1] Sunscreen, head coverings to protect from cold and sun, and glasses, if the eyelashes are missing, are also recommended.[7] In more than 50% of cases of sudden-onset localized "patchy" disease, hair regrows within a year.[14][15][7] In patients with only one or two patches, this one-year recovery will occur in up to 80%.[16][17] However, many people will have more than one episode over the course of a lifetime.[15] In many patients, hair loss and regrowth occurs simultaneously over the course of several years.[7] Among those in whom all body hair is lost, fewer than 10% recover.[18]

About 0.15% of people are affected at any one time, and 2% of people are affected at some point in time.[7][18] Onset is usually in childhood.[7] Females are affected at higher rates than males.[9]

Signs and symptoms edit

 
Alopecia areata

Typical first symptoms of alopecia areata are small bald patches. The underlying skin is unscarred and looks superficially normal. Although these patches can take many shapes, they are usually round or oval.[19] Alopecia areata most often affects the scalp and beard, but may occur on any part of the body with hair.[20] Different areas of the skin may exhibit hair loss and regrowth at the same time. The disease may also go into remission for a time, or may be permanent. It is common in children.[citation needed]

The area of hair loss may tingle or be mildly painful.[21] The hair tends to fall out over a short period of time, with the loss commonly occurring more on one side of the scalp than the other.[22]

Exclamation point hairs, narrower along the length of the strand closer to the base, producing a characteristic "exclamation point" appearance, are often present.[22] These hairs are very short (3–4 mm), and can be seen surrounding the bald patches.[17]

When healthy hair is pulled out, at most a few should come out, and ripped hair should not be distributed evenly across the tugged portion of the scalp. In cases of alopecia areata, hair tends to pull out more easily along the edge of the patch where the follicles are already being attacked by the body's immune system than away from the patch where they are still healthy.[23]

Nails may have pitting or trachyonychia.[20]

Causes edit

 
In alopecia areata, a hair follicle is attacked by the immune system. T-cells swarm the roots, killing the follicle. This causes the hair to fall out and parts of the head to become bald.

Alopecia areata is thought to be a systemic autoimmune disorder in which the body attacks its own anagen hair follicles and suppresses or stops hair growth.[22] For example, T cell lymphocytes cluster around affected follicles, causing inflammation and subsequent hair loss. Hair follicles in a normal state are thought to be kept secure from the immune system, a phenomenon called immune privilege. A breach in this immune privilege state is considered as the cause of alopecia areata.[13] A few cases of babies being born with congenital alopecia areata have been reported.[24] It is recognized as a type 1 inflammatory disease.[25]

Alopecia areata is not contagious.[22] It occurs more frequently in people who have affected family members, suggesting heredity may be a factor.[22] Strong evidence of genetic association with increased risk for alopecia areata was found by studying families with two or more affected members. This study identified at least four regions in the genome that are likely to contain these genes.[26] In addition, alopecia areata shares genetic risk factors with other autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 diabetes, and celiac disease.[8] It may be the only manifestation of celiac disease.[27][28]

Endogenous retinoids metabolic defect is a key part of the pathogenesis of the alopecia areata.[29]

In 2010, a genome-wide association study was completed that identified 129 single nucleotide polymorphisms that were associated with alopecia areata. The genes that were identified include those involved in controlling the activation and proliferation of regulatory T cells, cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4, interleukin-2, interleukin-2 receptor A, and Eos (also known as Ikaros family zinc finger 4), as well as the human leukocyte antigen. The study also identified two genes, PRDX5 and STX17, that are expressed in the hair follicle.[30]

A psychodermatological connection is noted with impairment in psychiatric comorbidities including mental well-being, self esteem and mental disorders acting as pathogenic triggers for alopecia areata.[31][32][33][34]

Diagnosis edit

Alopecia areata is usually diagnosed based on clinical features.

Trichoscopy may aid in establishing the diagnosis. In alopecia areata, trichoscopy shows regularly distributed "yellow dots" (hyperkeratotic plugs), small exclamation-mark hairs, and "black dots" (destroyed hairs in the hair follicle opening).[35]

Oftentimes, however, discrete areas of hair loss surrounded by exclamation mark hairs is sufficient for clinical diagnosis of alopecia areata. Sometimes, reddening of the skin, erythema, may also be present in the balding area.[18]

A biopsy is rarely needed to make the diagnosis or aid in the management of alopecia areata. Histologic findings may include peribulbar lymphocytic infiltration resembling a "swarm of bees", a shift in the anagen-to-telogen ratio towards telogen, and dilated follicular infundibulae.[8] Other helpful findings can include pigment incontinence in the hair bulb and follicular stelae. Occasionally, in inactive alopecia areata, no inflammatory infiltrates are found.[citation needed]

Classification edit

 
Varying degrees of alopecia areata, along with alopecia totalis

Commonly, alopecia areata involves hair loss in one or more round spots on the scalp.[22][36]

  • Hair may also be lost more diffusely over the whole scalp, in which case the condition is called diffuse alopecia areata.[22]
  • Alopecia areata monolocularis describes baldness in only one spot. It may occur anywhere on the head.
  • Alopecia areata multilocularis refers to multiple areas of hair loss.
  • Ophiasis refers to hair loss in the shape of a wave at the circumference of the head.
  • The disease may be limited only to the beard, in which case it is called alopecia areata barbae.[22]
  • If the person loses all the hair on the scalp, the disease is then called alopecia areata totalis.[7]
  • If all body hair, including pubic hair, is lost, the diagnosis then becomes alopecia areata universalis.[7]

Alopecia areata totalis and universalis are rare.[37]

Treatment edit

The objective assessment of treatment efficacy is very difficult and spontaneous remission is unpredictable, but if the affected area is patchy, the hair may regrow spontaneously in many cases.[38] None of the existing therapeutic options are curative or preventive.[38] A 2020 systematic review showed greater than 50% hair regrowth in 80.9% of patients treated with 5 mg/mL triamcinolone injections.[11] A Cochrane-style systematic review published in 2019 showed 5% topical minoxidil was more than 8x more associated with >50% hair regrowth at 6 months compared to placebo.[10] In cases of severe hair loss, limited success has been achieved by using the corticosteroid medications clobetasol or fluocinonide as an injection or cream. Application of corticosteroid creams to the affected skin is less effective and takes longer to produce results. Steroid injections are commonly used in sites where the areas of hair loss on the head are small or especially where eyebrow hair has been lost. Whether they are effective is uncertain.[citation needed] Some other medications that have been used are minoxidil, Elocon (mometasone) ointment (steroid cream), irritants (anthralin or topical coal tar), and topical immunotherapy ciclosporin, sometimes in different combinations. Topical corticosteroids frequently fail to enter the skin deeply enough to affect the hair bulbs, which are the treatment target,[20] and small lesions typically also regrow spontaneously. Oral corticosteroids may decrease the hair loss, but only for the period during which they are taken, and these medications can cause serious side effects.[20] No one treatment is effective in all cases, and some individuals may show no response to any treatment.[39]

For more severe cases, studies have shown promising results with the individual use of the immunosuppressant methotrexate or adjunct use with corticosteroids.[40]

When alopecia areata is associated with celiac disease, treatment with a gluten-free diet allows for complete and permanent regrowth of scalp and other body hair in many people, but in others, remissions and recurrences are seen.[27] This improvement is probably due to the normalization of the immune response as a result of gluten withdrawal from the diet.[27]

In June 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized baricitinib, a Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, for the treatment of severe alopecia areata.[41]

Ritlecitinib (Litfulo) was approved for medical use in the United States in June 2023.[42]

Fecal matter transplants (FMT) have been shown to reverse AA and support hair growth, with long lasting results, even going as far as growing additional hair on arms and face while grey hairs even regained colour. This supports the idea of a connection between gut microbiota having a part in hair loss.[43]


Hair transplantation may be an alternative for patients with chronic local alopecia areata. The fact that the disease is autoimmune and progresses with relapses is one of the biggest question marks before surgery. There have been case reports in the literature since the early 2000s. However, in an article published long-term follow-up; It is reported that the hair transplanted to the eyebrow area falls out again due to the recurrence of the disease.[44] A similar situation was not mentioned in previous studies on this subject. Perhaps the long-term follow-ups of other studies were not sufficient.

Prognosis edit

In most cases that begin with a small number of patches of hair loss, hair grows back after a few months to a year.[21] In cases with a greater number of patches, hair can either grow back or progress to alopecia areata totalis or, in rare cases, alopecia areata universalis.[21]

No loss of body function occurs, and the effects of alopecia areata are psychological (loss of self-image due to hair loss), although these can be severe. Loss of hair also means the scalp burns more easily in the sun. Patients may also have aberrant nail formation because keratin forms both hair and nails.[citation needed]

Hair may grow back and then fall out again later. This may not indicate a recurrence of the condition, but rather a natural cycle of growth-and-shedding from a relatively synchronised start; such a pattern will fade over time. Episodes of alopecia areata before puberty predispose to chronic recurrence of the condition.[20]

Alopecia can be the cause of psychological stress. Because hair loss can lead to significant changes in appearance, individuals with it may experience social phobia, anxiety, and depression.[45]

Epidemiology edit

The condition affects 0.1%–0.2% of the population, with a lifetime risk of 1%-2%,[46] and is more common in females.[9]

Alopecia areata occurs in people who are otherwise healthy and have no other skin disorders.[20] Initial presentation most commonly occurs in the early childhood, late teenage years, or young adulthood, but can happen at any ages.[22] Patients also tend to have a slightly higher incidence of conditions related to the immune system, such as asthma, allergies, atopic dermatitis, and hypothyroidism.

Society and culture edit

The term alopecia, used by physicians dating back to Hippocrates, originates from the Greek word for fox, "alopex", and was so-named due to fur loss seen in fox mange. "Areata" is derived from the Latin word, "area", meaning a vacant space or patch.[47]

Alopecia areata and alopecia barbae have been identified by some as the biblical nethek condition that is part of the greater tzaraath family of skin disorders; the said disorders are purported to being discussed in the Book of Leviticus, chapter 13.[48]

Notable people edit

Actor Christopher Reeve suffered from the skin condition.[49] NASCAR driver Joey Logano, obstacle athlete Kevin Bull,[50] politicians Peter Dutton[51] and Ayanna Pressley,[52] K-pop singer Peniel Shin of BtoB,[53] actors Anthony Carrigan[54] and Alan Fletcher,[55] and actresses Jada Pinkett Smith,[56] May Calamawy,[57] and Lili Reinhart[58] all have some form of alopecia areata.

Research edit

Many medications are being studied.[59]

In 2014, preliminary findings showing that oral ruxolitinib, a drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for bone marrow disorder myelofibrosis, restored hair growth in three individuals with long-standing and severe disease.[60]

In March 2020, the US FDA granted breakthrough therapy designation to baricitinib for the systematic treatment of alopecia areata[61] and granted approval in June 2022,[41] with a 32% efficacy rate for people with 50% hair loss reaching 80% scalp coverage in 36 weeks.[62] It acts as an inhibitor of janus kinase (JAK), blocking the subtypes JAK1 and JAK2.[63]

References edit

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  62. ^ "FDA Approves First Systemic Treatment for Alopecia Areata". U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (Press release). 13 June 2022. from the original on 14 June 2022. Retrieved 13 June 2022.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  63. ^ "Summary of opinion for Olumiant" (PDF). European Medicines Agency (EMA). 15 December 2016. (PDF) from the original on 15 March 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2016.

External links edit

alopecia, areata, also, known, spot, baldness, condition, which, hair, lost, from, some, areas, body, often, results, bald, spots, scalp, each, about, size, coin, psychological, stress, illness, possible, factors, bringing, alopecia, areata, individuals, risk,. Alopecia areata also known as spot baldness is a condition in which hair is lost from some or all areas of the body 12 1 It often results in a few bald spots on the scalp each about the size of a coin 7 Psychological stress and illness are possible factors in bringing on alopecia areata in individuals at risk but in most cases there is no obvious trigger 7 People are generally otherwise healthy 7 In a few cases all the hair on the scalp is lost alopecia totalis or all body hair is lost alopecia universalis Hair loss can be permanent or temporary 7 1 Alopecia areataOther namesAlopecia Celsi vitiligo capitis Jonston s alopecia 1 Alopecia areata seen on the back of the scalpPronunciation ˌ ae l e ˈ p iː ʃ i e ˌ ae r i ˈ ɑː t e also ˌ ae l oʊ s i e ˈ eɪ t e 2 3 4 5 SpecialtyDermatology Immunology 6 SymptomsAreas of hair loss usually on the scalp 7 Usual onsetChildhood 7 CausesAutoimmune 7 Risk factorsFamily history female sex rheumatoid arthritis type 1 diabetes celiac disease 7 8 9 Differential diagnosisTrichotillomania alopecia mucinosa postpartum alopecia 1 TreatmentSunscreen head coverings to protect from sun and cold 7 Medicationtopical minoxidil 10 and triamcinolone injections 11 PrognosisDoes not affect life expectancy 7 1 Frequency 2 US 7 Alopecia areata is believed to be an autoimmune disease resulting from a breach in the immune privilege of the hair follicles 12 13 Risk factors include a family history of the condition 7 Among identical twins if one is affected the other has about a 50 chance of also being affected 7 The underlying mechanism involves failure by the body to recognize its own cells with subsequent immune mediated destruction of the hair follicle 7 No cure for the condition is known 7 Some treatments particularly triamcinolone injections and 5 minoxidil topical creams 11 10 are effective in speeding hair regrowth 7 1 Sunscreen head coverings to protect from cold and sun and glasses if the eyelashes are missing are also recommended 7 In more than 50 of cases of sudden onset localized patchy disease hair regrows within a year 14 15 7 In patients with only one or two patches this one year recovery will occur in up to 80 16 17 However many people will have more than one episode over the course of a lifetime 15 In many patients hair loss and regrowth occurs simultaneously over the course of several years 7 Among those in whom all body hair is lost fewer than 10 recover 18 About 0 15 of people are affected at any one time and 2 of people are affected at some point in time 7 18 Onset is usually in childhood 7 Females are affected at higher rates than males 9 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Causes 3 Diagnosis 3 1 Classification 4 Treatment 5 Prognosis 6 Epidemiology 7 Society and culture 7 1 Notable people 8 Research 9 References 10 External linksSigns and symptoms edit nbsp Alopecia areata Typical first symptoms of alopecia areata are small bald patches The underlying skin is unscarred and looks superficially normal Although these patches can take many shapes they are usually round or oval 19 Alopecia areata most often affects the scalp and beard but may occur on any part of the body with hair 20 Different areas of the skin may exhibit hair loss and regrowth at the same time The disease may also go into remission for a time or may be permanent It is common in children citation needed The area of hair loss may tingle or be mildly painful 21 The hair tends to fall out over a short period of time with the loss commonly occurring more on one side of the scalp than the other 22 Exclamation point hairs narrower along the length of the strand closer to the base producing a characteristic exclamation point appearance are often present 22 These hairs are very short 3 4 mm and can be seen surrounding the bald patches 17 When healthy hair is pulled out at most a few should come out and ripped hair should not be distributed evenly across the tugged portion of the scalp In cases of alopecia areata hair tends to pull out more easily along the edge of the patch where the follicles are already being attacked by the body s immune system than away from the patch where they are still healthy 23 Nails may have pitting or trachyonychia 20 Causes edit nbsp In alopecia areata a hair follicle is attacked by the immune system T cells swarm the roots killing the follicle This causes the hair to fall out and parts of the head to become bald Alopecia areata is thought to be a systemic autoimmune disorder in which the body attacks its own anagen hair follicles and suppresses or stops hair growth 22 For example T cell lymphocytes cluster around affected follicles causing inflammation and subsequent hair loss Hair follicles in a normal state are thought to be kept secure from the immune system a phenomenon called immune privilege A breach in this immune privilege state is considered as the cause of alopecia areata 13 A few cases of babies being born with congenital alopecia areata have been reported 24 It is recognized as a type 1 inflammatory disease 25 Alopecia areata is not contagious 22 It occurs more frequently in people who have affected family members suggesting heredity may be a factor 22 Strong evidence of genetic association with increased risk for alopecia areata was found by studying families with two or more affected members This study identified at least four regions in the genome that are likely to contain these genes 26 In addition alopecia areata shares genetic risk factors with other autoimmune diseases including rheumatoid arthritis type 1 diabetes and celiac disease 8 It may be the only manifestation of celiac disease 27 28 Endogenous retinoids metabolic defect is a key part of the pathogenesis of the alopecia areata 29 In 2010 a genome wide association study was completed that identified 129 single nucleotide polymorphisms that were associated with alopecia areata The genes that were identified include those involved in controlling the activation and proliferation of regulatory T cells cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated antigen 4 interleukin 2 interleukin 2 receptor A and Eos also known as Ikaros family zinc finger 4 as well as the human leukocyte antigen The study also identified two genes PRDX5 and STX17 that are expressed in the hair follicle 30 A psychodermatological connection is noted with impairment in psychiatric comorbidities including mental well being self esteem and mental disorders acting as pathogenic triggers for alopecia areata 31 32 33 34 Diagnosis editAlopecia areata is usually diagnosed based on clinical features Trichoscopy may aid in establishing the diagnosis In alopecia areata trichoscopy shows regularly distributed yellow dots hyperkeratotic plugs small exclamation mark hairs and black dots destroyed hairs in the hair follicle opening 35 Oftentimes however discrete areas of hair loss surrounded by exclamation mark hairs is sufficient for clinical diagnosis of alopecia areata Sometimes reddening of the skin erythema may also be present in the balding area 18 A biopsy is rarely needed to make the diagnosis or aid in the management of alopecia areata Histologic findings may include peribulbar lymphocytic infiltration resembling a swarm of bees a shift in the anagen to telogen ratio towards telogen and dilated follicular infundibulae 8 Other helpful findings can include pigment incontinence in the hair bulb and follicular stelae Occasionally in inactive alopecia areata no inflammatory infiltrates are found citation needed Classification edit nbsp Varying degrees of alopecia areata along with alopecia totalis Commonly alopecia areata involves hair loss in one or more round spots on the scalp 22 36 Hair may also be lost more diffusely over the whole scalp in which case the condition is called diffuse alopecia areata 22 Alopecia areata monolocularis describes baldness in only one spot It may occur anywhere on the head Alopecia areata multilocularis refers to multiple areas of hair loss Ophiasis refers to hair loss in the shape of a wave at the circumference of the head The disease may be limited only to the beard in which case it is called alopecia areata barbae 22 If the person loses all the hair on the scalp the disease is then called alopecia areata totalis 7 If all body hair including pubic hair is lost the diagnosis then becomes alopecia areata universalis 7 Alopecia areata totalis and universalis are rare 37 Treatment editThe objective assessment of treatment efficacy is very difficult and spontaneous remission is unpredictable but if the affected area is patchy the hair may regrow spontaneously in many cases 38 None of the existing therapeutic options are curative or preventive 38 A 2020 systematic review showed greater than 50 hair regrowth in 80 9 of patients treated with 5 mg mL triamcinolone injections 11 A Cochrane style systematic review published in 2019 showed 5 topical minoxidil was more than 8x more associated with gt 50 hair regrowth at 6 months compared to placebo 10 In cases of severe hair loss limited success has been achieved by using the corticosteroid medications clobetasol or fluocinonide as an injection or cream Application of corticosteroid creams to the affected skin is less effective and takes longer to produce results Steroid injections are commonly used in sites where the areas of hair loss on the head are small or especially where eyebrow hair has been lost Whether they are effective is uncertain citation needed Some other medications that have been used are minoxidil Elocon mometasone ointment steroid cream irritants anthralin or topical coal tar and topical immunotherapy ciclosporin sometimes in different combinations Topical corticosteroids frequently fail to enter the skin deeply enough to affect the hair bulbs which are the treatment target 20 and small lesions typically also regrow spontaneously Oral corticosteroids may decrease the hair loss but only for the period during which they are taken and these medications can cause serious side effects 20 No one treatment is effective in all cases and some individuals may show no response to any treatment 39 For more severe cases studies have shown promising results with the individual use of the immunosuppressant methotrexate or adjunct use with corticosteroids 40 When alopecia areata is associated with celiac disease treatment with a gluten free diet allows for complete and permanent regrowth of scalp and other body hair in many people but in others remissions and recurrences are seen 27 This improvement is probably due to the normalization of the immune response as a result of gluten withdrawal from the diet 27 In June 2022 the U S Food and Drug Administration FDA authorized baricitinib a Janus kinase JAK inhibitor for the treatment of severe alopecia areata 41 Ritlecitinib Litfulo was approved for medical use in the United States in June 2023 42 Fecal matter transplants FMT have been shown to reverse AA and support hair growth with long lasting results even going as far as growing additional hair on arms and face while grey hairs even regained colour This supports the idea of a connection between gut microbiota having a part in hair loss 43 Hair transplantation may be an alternative for patients with chronic local alopecia areata The fact that the disease is autoimmune and progresses with relapses is one of the biggest question marks before surgery There have been case reports in the literature since the early 2000s However in an article published long term follow up It is reported that the hair transplanted to the eyebrow area falls out again due to the recurrence of the disease 44 A similar situation was not mentioned in previous studies on this subject Perhaps the long term follow ups of other studies were not sufficient Prognosis editIn most cases that begin with a small number of patches of hair loss hair grows back after a few months to a year 21 In cases with a greater number of patches hair can either grow back or progress to alopecia areata totalis or in rare cases alopecia areata universalis 21 No loss of body function occurs and the effects of alopecia areata are psychological loss of self image due to hair loss although these can be severe Loss of hair also means the scalp burns more easily in the sun Patients may also have aberrant nail formation because keratin forms both hair and nails citation needed Hair may grow back and then fall out again later This may not indicate a recurrence of the condition but rather a natural cycle of growth and shedding from a relatively synchronised start such a pattern will fade over time Episodes of alopecia areata before puberty predispose to chronic recurrence of the condition 20 Alopecia can be the cause of psychological stress Because hair loss can lead to significant changes in appearance individuals with it may experience social phobia anxiety and depression 45 Epidemiology editThe condition affects 0 1 0 2 of the population with a lifetime risk of 1 2 46 and is more common in females 9 Alopecia areata occurs in people who are otherwise healthy and have no other skin disorders 20 Initial presentation most commonly occurs in the early childhood late teenage years or young adulthood but can happen at any ages 22 Patients also tend to have a slightly higher incidence of conditions related to the immune system such as asthma allergies atopic dermatitis and hypothyroidism Society and culture editThe term alopecia used by physicians dating back to Hippocrates originates from the Greek word for fox alopex and was so named due to fur loss seen in fox mange Areata is derived from the Latin word area meaning a vacant space or patch 47 Alopecia areata and alopecia barbae have been identified by some as the biblical nethek condition that is part of the greater tzaraath family of skin disorders the said disorders are purported to being discussed in the Book of Leviticus chapter 13 48 Notable people edit Actor Christopher Reeve suffered from the skin condition 49 NASCAR driver Joey Logano obstacle athlete Kevin Bull 50 politicians Peter Dutton 51 and Ayanna Pressley 52 K pop singer Peniel Shin of BtoB 53 actors Anthony Carrigan 54 and Alan Fletcher 55 and actresses Jada Pinkett Smith 56 May Calamawy 57 and Lili Reinhart 58 all have some form of alopecia areata Research editMany medications are being studied 59 In 2014 preliminary findings showing that oral ruxolitinib a drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administration FDA for bone marrow disorder myelofibrosis restored hair growth in three individuals with long standing and severe disease 60 In March 2020 the US FDA granted breakthrough therapy designation to baricitinib for the systematic treatment of alopecia areata 61 and granted approval in June 2022 41 with a 32 efficacy rate for people with 50 hair loss reaching 80 scalp coverage in 36 weeks 62 It acts as an inhibitor of janus kinase JAK blocking the subtypes JAK1 and JAK2 63 References edit a b c d e f Alopecia Areata NORD National Organization for Rare Disorders NORD National Organization for Rare Disorders 2004 Archived from the original on 21 February 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2017 alopecia The Chambers Dictionary 9th ed Chambers 2003 ISBN 0 550 10105 5 alopecia Collins English Dictionary 13th ed HarperCollins 2018 ISBN 978 0 008 28437 4 Definition of alopecia Dictionary com www dictionary com Archived from the original on 28 March 2022 Retrieved 14 February 2022 alopecia Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 25 March 2022 Alopecia Areata National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases 4 April 2017 Retrieved 17 November 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Liaison Ray Fleming Office of Communications and Public May 2016 Questions and Answers About Alopecia Areata NIAMS Archived from the original on 4 July 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Hordinsky M Junqueira AL June 2015 Alopecia areata update Seminars in Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery Review 34 2 72 5 doi 10 12788 j sder 2015 0160 PMID 26176283 nbsp a b c Lundin M Chawa S Sachdev A Bhanusali D Seiffert Sinha K Sinha AA April 2014 Gender differences in alopecia areata Journal of Drugs in Dermatology 13 4 409 413 PMID 24719059 a b c Freire P Riera R Martimbianco A Petri V Atallah AN September 2019 Minoxidil for patchy alopecia areata systematic review and meta analysis Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology 33 9 1792 1799 doi 10 1111 jdv 15545 PMID 30835901 S2CID 73460786 a b c Yee BE Tong Y Goldenberg A Hata T April 2020 Efficacy of different concentrations of intralesional triamcinolone acetonide for alopecia areata A systematic review and meta analysis Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 82 4 1018 1021 doi 10 1016 j jaad 2019 11 066 PMID 31843657 S2CID 209389315 a b Erjavec SO Gelfman S Abdelaziz AR Lee EY Monga I Alkelai A et al February 2022 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areata International Journal of Dermatology 46 2 121 31 doi 10 1111 j 1365 4632 2007 03193 x PMID 17269961 S2CID 57279630 Lenane P Pope E Krafchik B February 2005 Congenital alopecia areata Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology Case Reports Review 52 2 Suppl 1 8 11 doi 10 1016 j jaad 2004 06 024 PMID 15692503 We believe AA should be classified not only as an acquired but also a congenital form of nonscarring hair loss It may well be more common than is thought because of lack of recognition Fukuyama M Ito T Ohyama M January 2022 Alopecia areata Current understanding of the pathophysiology and update on therapeutic approaches featuring the Japanese Dermatological Association guidelines The Journal of Dermatology 49 1 19 36 doi 10 1111 1346 8138 16207 PMID 34709679 S2CID 240073350 Martinez Mir A Zlotogorski A Gordon D Petukhova L Mo J Gilliam TC et al February 2007 Genomewide scan for linkage reveals evidence of several susceptibility loci for alopecia areata American Journal of Human Genetics 80 2 316 28 doi 10 1086 511442 PMC 1785354 PMID 17236136 a b c Caproni M Bonciolini V D Errico A Antiga E Fabbri P 2012 Celiac disease and dermatologic manifestations many skin clue to unfold gluten sensitive enteropathy Gastroenterology Research and Practice Review 2012 1 12 doi 10 1155 2012 952753 PMC 3369470 PMID 22693492 Tack GJ Verbeek WH Schreurs MW Mulder CJ April 2010 The spectrum of celiac disease epidemiology clinical aspects and treatment Nature Reviews Gastroenterology amp Hepatology Review 7 4 204 13 doi 10 1038 nrgastro 2010 23 PMID 20212505 S2CID 7951660 Duncan FJ Silva KA Johnson CJ King BL Szatkiewicz JP Kamdar SP et al February 2013 Endogenous retinoids in the pathogenesis of alopecia areata The Journal of Investigative Dermatology 133 2 334 43 doi 10 1038 jid 2012 344 PMC 3546144 PMID 23014334 Petukhova L Duvic M Hordinsky M Norris D Price V Shimomura Y et al July 2010 Genome wide association study in alopecia areata implicates both innate and adaptive 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2022 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Calamawy M 11 June 2020 Sharing My Alopecia Helped Me Set New Expectations for Myself Glamour Archived from the original on 5 June 2021 Retrieved 5 June 2021 Lili Reinhart Reveals She Was Diagnosed With Alopecia Search clinicaltrials gov for alopecia areata clinicaltrials gov National Institutes of Health Archived from the original on 8 September 2017 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Mohammadi D 2016 A ray of hope for alopecia areata patients The Pharmaceutical Journal 296 7889 doi 10 1211 PJ 2016 20201092 Lilly Receives FDA Breakthrough Therapy Designation for Baricitinib for the Treatment of Alopecia Areata Press release Eli Lilly and Company 16 March 2020 Archived from the original on 17 March 2020 Retrieved 16 March 2020 via PR Newswire FDA Approves First Systemic Treatment for Alopecia Areata U S Food and Drug Administration FDA Press release 13 June 2022 Archived from the original on 14 June 2022 Retrieved 13 June 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Summary of opinion for Olumiant PDF European Medicines Agency EMA 15 December 2016 Archived PDF from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 18 December 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alopecia areata DermAtlas 42 Portal nbsp Medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alopecia areata amp oldid 1216265002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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