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Hi all! It seems as though my FFA is very quickly progressing. Is this because I just started treatments? Or am I a double winner, both having FFA and having an aggressive form of it.
Question: How quickly did/has your FFA progressed?
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Hi. I lost about an inch at the front plus one temple with in a year. I have lost about another inch now and the other temple. Total of 2 years for both. My mu has had FFA for about 7 years and has lost 3 inches total. She has never taken any medication. xx
My ffa progressed very slowly at first. I think I had it for at least 2 years before I went to see a doctor. I noticed I was losing the little fine, wispy hairs around my face and thought it was just part of aging. This went on for about a year when my hairdresser noticed that my widow's peak was gone. Again, we both thought it was hormones & aging. I had absolutely no pain until a little over a year ago when my entire head got extremely tender. I decided something wasn't quite right and made an appointment with my derm. I was diagnosed with FFA a year ago. I started using Rogaine & a topical steroid right away, & have been taking Plaquenil for almost 9 months. I've noticed the most hairloss around my temples since my diagnosis. I've probably lost about a half inch on each side. I don't think my forehead hasn't receded very much in the last year, but my bangs have definitely gotten thinner. I agree with the other ladies who said the plaquenil doesn't stop the hairloss, but it has gradually slowed it down. I am still able to conceal my hairline by thickening up my existing hair with Rogaine and help from a good hairdresser. I remember when I was first diagnosed thinking that I would probably be in a wig within a year. Well, March 14, is one year since my diagnosis, and so far I'm "holding my own" as my hairdresser says. Good luck to you.
It sounds as if most of us are really only losing moderate amounts of hair, and at a slower pace than anticipated. For me, it's been 8 months since diagnosis, during which time I've been getting the steroid injections about every 6 weeks. I am definitely still losing hair -- both the receding frontal hairline/temples, and the sad double whammy of 'female pattern baldness', which means my hair is getting very thin on top, and whichever way it falls my scalp is quite visible. But at least there IS still hair throughout the same region, however thin it may be. With the FFA, on the other hand, the hairs are falling out in a gradually receding line, leaving no "thinning" in its wake, just shiny baldness. Each hair that's gone is gone forever, and it takes its neighbors with it. The most visible effect is still the loss of eyebrows. I've been experimenting with various makeup tips for now. This week, however, I've noticed the eyelashes thinning. That's the hardest to accept, and the hardest to disguise. For head hair, we have scarves and wigs. For eyebrows we have makeup and 'tattoo' pigmentation. But for eyelashes, we throw the useless mascara away and try not to cry.
As for the speed and results of the FFA progression on the scalp, I would guess I had already lost close to an inch on both temples before diagnosis, and thought it was 'natural' aging. I was almost 64 when it was diagnosed. Since then, the frontal hairline has eliminated my lifelong widow's peak, and another centimeter or so across the forehead. The temples have lost another couple centimeters. But I have to say, I'm relieved and grateful that it's no worse than that! After reading a little in online medical sites, and seeing some of the downright freaky photos, I thought I was destined to look like a circus clown, with a full head of hair on the back. I've been assuming that the injections are at least partly responsible for the slowness of the progression. But maybe this is just normal for FFA, with or without medications. Who knows what effect I might see if I quit the injections. For now, I don't want to rock the boat, and am concentrating on the good news that the disease is only moving slowly. We all know it can't be stopped, or reversed. But if we can slow it to a pace that gives us, and everyone close to us, time to adjust to the changes, I'd say we're doing alright. I am grateful not to have Alopecia Areata, or cancer with chemo, where it falls out in clumps, and can lead to total baldness in a matter of weeks. We have to count our blessings.
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