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I was diagnosed, with Alopecia Areata, a couple of weeks ago. I saw a dermatologist who prescribed steroid cream, followed by injections if necessary. I then saw my primary physician who recommended the same course of action. I, however, don't want treatment. I can't quite explain why, but it doesn't feel like the right decision.
My primary has Alopecia patients who experience regrowth from treatment and who get steroid injections for each new/reoccurring bald spot. I don't feel that reoccurring steroid use, that doesn't treat the cause, is something I want to participate in. I normally don't go against my physician's opinion, but it feel like I'm being pressed into treatment.
I hope that some of you may have refused treatment. If so, I would appreciate you sharing your decision and experience with me.
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I tried the steroid injections and anthralin cream for about 6 months, the alopecia kept on going and I stopped all treatment. If I had it to do over again, I'd never have even bothered. I think it's going to do what it's going to do. Going to the doctor all the time was time-consuming, annoying and ultimately fruitless. I'm a happy AU now for over 25 years. Love my 'Freedom hair' when I want to wear it and love NOT having hair when I don't! Whatever treatment you try, they all have side effects and if the alopecia hasn't decided to shut itself off, you just lose it all anyway when you stop the treatments. I don't like taking unnecessary stuff and steroids are no exception. And in response to being happy and then your hair follows - no, it doesn't. I'm one VERY happy camper and I've been bald now for over 25 years! The trick is to be happy with or without hair!
My daughter has alopeica. It started when she was 2 1/2 and of course we tried everything. I soon realized nothing was working. We DID try a steroid cream but it only burned her scalp so badly that it bled. That's when I said NO MORE!
She will be 8 next month and we decided that after puberty she can try whatever she likes. She is happy and actually offered to shave my head last summer when it was so terribly hot!
We had joined a support group and heard nothing but terrible things about steroids and I wasn't going to try it anyway.
This is your decision. We can give you our thoughts and our stories but the ultimate decision is yours.
Doctors will try to give you whatever you want, but do the research first.
Sybil...Olivia's mom
I got AU 40 almost 41 years ago I went thru the injections, not one hair of regrowth. Each person is different, I went to doctor after doctor trying just to get a diagnosis. (Not so easy back then). So it depends on what your state of mind is, are you willing to just wait and see if nature brings regrowth or do you want to go the hassle of the injections? Either one it is a risk because there is NO guarantee either way. I may not have completely accepted my AU, but I finally had to stop chasing something that was not going to happen, I self diagnosed, then confirmed with a doctor. In my case up to that moment NOT ONE doctor had ever used the term Alopecia, Alopecial Universalis, or autoimmune disorder/disease. So you are more fortuneate that you know what is wrong even if we never know the WHY of it all.
I guess what I am trying to say is you have to decide, if you do nothing and no regrowth comes, can you live with that. If you can, and are ok with that, then I would not waste my time or money chasing after something that may or may not "fix" the problem. Even if it does, it may be only temporary, there are no guarantees.
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