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I have alopipicia had have had it for many years, my focus has been on finding what's causing it rather than "treatment". I think without finding the root cause than I'll never find the cure.
All of the research I've done points toward chronic infections( things like Lyme disease, fungal/yeast overgrowth , parasites etc)and heavy metal toxicity as the root causes , with heavy metals being primary and infections being secondary. How many members here have silver fillings in their teeth? They contain and leak mercury into the body round the clock. Also how many have co existing health problems (mental or physical , in reality they are one in the same )
Various allergies , depression , anxiety , panic attacks , fatigue , lethargy are all symptoms of these issues as well. I'm interested to hear members health histories and backround info. When did your alopecia start? Did anything change in your life before this like diet, stress, illness , dental work, vaccinations etc
Putting the pieces of this puzzle together might be easier then we think if we all get on the same page. A big thing for me was realizing alopecia was a symptom of a problem in my body , not the problem itself. Let's find out what the problem is ...
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Alopecia areata is genetic. Scientists at Columbia University published a large study on this some years ago, and it has been the subject of several subsequent studies. Scientists are working on using this genetic knowledge to develop ways to predict the severity of an individual's AA course and, eventually, to halt AA.
http://newsroom.cumc.columbia.edu/blog/2010/06/30/genetic-basis-of-...
No, Matt, chronic infections and "toxin exposure" (which toxins? You don't even know which ones) do NOT just mutate DNA automatically. This isn't comic book science. DNA mutation -- particularly DNA mutation that reaches across multi-generations, geographic regions, etc. -- requires quite a bit more than what you think.
You still can't cite any of your sources. Not even one. There is not a "wealth of info out there" -- there are blogs run by quacks and by conspiracy theorists like you. Why should anyone believe a thing any of that or what you say? You have shown little to no understanding of biology, genetics, or how a scientific hypothesis becomes a scientific fact. There are lots and lots of steps in between hypothesis and fact, and you are willing to skip all of them because of your unexplained, ill-defined, and frankly harmful distrust of "traditional" scientific endeavor. So long as something fits into your limited belief system, you are willing to go along with it -- you are clearly not willing to get the education or put in the work to test any of it out in an evidence-based context subject to high-level scrutiny or duplication.
Adherence to evidence-based science and scientific method has advanced our knowledge of the human body and the cosmos. Science -- the traditional, conventional kind painstakingly formed over centuries of study and effort -- has been a wonderful thing for humankind. Pseudoscience -- the kind to which you subscribe -- has only ever harmed humankind.
Your sources of (mis)information do not follow any regimen of scientific method and do not subscribe to evidence-based science because it would take too long, likely not show results to back up their hypotheses, and deprive them of the "wealth" of vulnerable patients willing to pay for unproven and expensive treatments. Turn your scrutiny and suspicion on your sources. What are their motivations?
Also, Matt, you still do not understand that there are different forms of alopecia, with different causes. You continue to lump everything together and you continue to think that all alopecia can be explained and/or solved by your unscientific method of gathering and misunderstanding anecdotal data. That's not how science works.
Plenty of people answered your questions. You just don't like their answers because they don't fit into your ill-formed hypothesis and because most of the respondents are unwilling to go down the dangerous road of pseudoscience. (But some people did -- you got at least two invitations to Facebook groups full of people like you.)
Why should I disclose my health history to an untrained non-professional who subscribes to quackery and junk science? What are you going to do -- diagnose me? You have no credentials or training to do so. You are completely without any ability to diagnose anyone. You have "schooled" yourself on junk science and have been going around the boards here diagnosing people with all of the things that you think YOU have -- namely, fungal/yeast overgrowth, heavy metal toxicity, blah, blah, blah.
No matter what I say about my health history, you will say that my hair loss is due to one or a combination of your fad pseudoscience theories. If I say I don't have Lyme Disease, heavy metal toxicity, fungal/yeast overgrowth, etc., you will just tell me that I DO have one or more of those things -- because that fits your narrative. A narrative that you continue to refuse to substantiate by citing any of your sources.
So why tell you anything about my health at all? Why on earth would I invite a diagnosis by, of all people, someone that I think has demonstrated a very obvious lack of understanding of the basics of genetics, biology, medicine, and scientific method?
Further, the mere fact that concomitant symptomatology may exist alongside hairless does not meant that all the symptoms -- or even some of them, or even any of them -- are related or that they demonstrate causation. I don't think you have any understanding of the difference between correlation and causation.
You say that because you started some treatment regimen for fungal overgrowth and/or Lyme Disease and your AA has improved, you believe that there is involvement between the two. That's possible correlation. It does not show causation -- i.e., that your fungal infection and/or Lyme Disease caused your AA in the first place.
Also, the fact that you were diagnosed with some or all of your many ailments at the University of Connecticut is is not some "get out of jail free" card that allows you to bypass citing your sources. Not to feed into your paranoia, but quacks are everywhere. There are quacks at UConn -- for example, in the Functional/Integrative Medicine program.
And once again -- as in all of your posts -- you demonstrate a fundamental inability to understand that there are different kinds of alopecia, that there are different causes for different types of alopecia, and a fundamental lack of understanding about alopecia areata. I'm glad that your areata has dissipated for the time being -- but that is all it is: for the time being. Areata tends to return, that's a hallmark characteristic of it. You haven't found a cure. Gathering anecdotal information is interesting, but you do not have the means or knowledge or training to find the cause of any type of alopecia or the cure for any type of alopecia. Get yourself to a college and take science courses so that you can learn about the scientific method and how genetics and biology actually work, or donate money to good organizations like the NAAF so that they can fund solid, honest research.
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