“Alopecia Areata” Questions and Answers about Alopecia Areata
Dec.25, 2009 in
Hair Loss Cause
Product Description
Alopecia areata is considered an autoimmune disease, in which the immune system, which is designed to protect the body from foreign invaders such as viruses and bacteria, mistakenly attacks the hair follicles, the tiny cup-shaped structures from which hairs grow. This can lead to hair loss on the scalp and elsewhere. In most cases, hair falls out in small, round patches about the size of a quarter. In many cases, the disease does not extend beyond a few bare patches. In some people, hair loss is more extensive. Although uncommon, the disease can progress to cause total loss of hair on the head (referred to as alopecia areata totalis) or complete loss of hair on the head, face, and body (alopecia areata universalis).
Buy “Alopecia Areata” Questions and Answers about Alopecia Areata at Amazon
Buy “Alopecia Areata” Questions and Answers about Alopecia Areata at Amazon
Related Posts
- Stop The Primary Cause Of Accelerated Hair Loss /damage
- Hair loss in women: more than meets the eye.: An article from: Dermatology Nursing
- 'Lion King Alopecia' tamed by dermatologist: uproar on the set.
- Pate: The Facts of Nature Underlying Pate Thinning Hair and Baldness, Its Causes and a Professional Program for Prevention
- 'Lion King Alopecia' tamed by dermatologist: uproar on the set.










Leave a Reply