| Literature DB >> 29670386 |
Victoria Billero1, Mariya Miteva1.
Abstract
Traction alopecia (TA) affects one-third of women of African descent who wear various forms of traumatic hairstyling for a prolonged period of time. The risk of TA is increased by the extent of pulling and duration of traction, as well as the use of chemical relaxation. The frequent use of tight buns or ponytails, the attachment of weaves or hair extensions, and tight braids (such as cornrows and dreadlocks) are believed to be the highest risk hairstyles. TA can also occur in the setting of religious and occupational traumatic hairstyling. In its later stages, the disease may progress into an irreversible scarring alopecia if traumatic hairstyling continues without appropriate intervention. The most common clinical presentation includes marginal alopecia and non-marginal patchy alopecia. A clue to the clinical diagnosis is the preservation of the fringe sign as opposed to its loss in frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA). Dermoscopy can be helpful in the diagnosis and can detect the ongoing traction by the presence of hair casts. Histopathology can distinguish TA from alopecia areata, FFA, and patchy central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia. Currently, there is no cure. Therefore, it is imperative that clinicians educate high-risk populations about TA and those practices that may convey the risk of hair loss.Entities:
Keywords: African-American; alopecia; dermoscopy; hair loss; traction alopecia; trichoscopy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29670386 PMCID: PMC5896661 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S137296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Figure 1Painting “Greenland Mother” by W Langdon Kihn (1898–1957), showing a Greenlandic Inuit woman holding her baby. Note that her hair is worn in a tight coiffure arranged at the top of her head. Traumatic marginal alopecia can be appreciated, as was described by Trebitsch in 1907 as “alopecia Groenlandica.” From: National Geographic, October 1949, page 486. Public access.
Summary of traumatic hairstyles and their associated patient populations
| Hairstyle | Hairstyle (description) | Associated patient population(s) |
|---|---|---|
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| Hair is separated into sections diffusely throughout the scalp. Within each section, hair is divided into three parts that are woven together away from the scalp | Men, women, and children of African descent |
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| Hair is woven through plastic beads and secured at the distal end of the braid | Men, women, and children of African descent |
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| Hair is separated into sections linearly along the frontal scalp. Within each of these sections, three parts of hair are pulled tightly from the sides of the scalp in order to weave the sections down from the frontal to the occipital scalp | Men, women, and children of African descent |
|
| The addition of synthetic or human hair that is either sewn onto the natural hair that has been braided into cornrows or glued onto the base of the hair | Men and women of African descent |
|
| All of the hair is sectioned into squares. Each section of hair is held away from scalp while the hair is combed back toward the scalp with a comb, teasing, and knotting it up. The section is then secured with two rubber bands, one at the scalp and one at the distal end. Then each section is twisted or rolled | Men and women of African descent, Rastafarian, white counterculture |
|
| One or more sections of hair are pulled together and held together by a hair accessory near the scalp, usually an elastic band | Hispanic women, athletic women |
|
| All of the hair is pulled tightly together and twisted before being tied off to sit on the frontal scalp. The turban is then wrapped tightly around the hair and the head | Sikh men and some women |
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| The first layer of the turban is securely wrapped around the hair and head. The second layer is wrapped on top of the first layer | Islamic women |
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| All of the hair is pulled back tightly away from the face, twisted at the scalp, and wrapped around itself in a coil on the top, or the back of the head, or at the occipital scalp. It is secured with bobby pins, elastic bands, pencils, or barrettes | Ballerinas, sumo wrestlers |
|
| Depending on the shape of the cap, it is tightly secured by bobby pins at the parietal and/or occipital scalp | Nurses in developing countries as well as in Japan and South Korea |
Note: Images, in descending order: African girl braids, photograph by Wikimedia user Cestmoicarisse, distributed under a CC-SA 4.0 license. License at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/. Box braids by Wikimedia user Randen Pederson, available under a CC-BY 2.0 Creative Commons license, available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en. Cornrows, photograph by Wikimedia user David Shankbone, distributed under a CC-BY 2.5 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/. Closure of netting weave process, photograph by Wikimedia user Kuteyiay, distributed under a CC-SA 3.0 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. Man with dreadlocks, photograph by Wikimedia user Melimama, distributed under a CC-SA 2.0 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0. Ponytail black hair, photograph by Wikimedia user Nicki Varkevisser, distributed by a CC-BY 2.0 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/. Sikh wearing turban, photograph by Wikimedia user Harkanwal Singh, distributed under a CC-BY-SA 2.5 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/. Young Turkish woman, photograph by Wikimedia user Mstyslav Chernov, distributed by a CC-BY-SA 4.0 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/. Circumbraided donut bun, photograph by Wikimedia user Stilfehler, distributed under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 license. License available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/. Image of nurse, from “The Canadian Nurse” (1905). This image is in the public domain according to contributing organization, the University of Ottawa. Information at https://www.flickr.com/photos/126377022@N07/14783151983.
Figure 2Biopsy-proven traction alopecia involving the frontal and parietal scalp.
Figure 3Marginal traction alopecia in patient with braids.
Figure 4Trichoscopy of alopecic patch in traction alopecia shows only individual hairs with preserved marking of follicular openings outlined in brown that correspond to the pigmented basal cell layer of the infundibula.
Figure 5Trichoscopy of acute traction alopecia demonstrates black dots and broken hairs at different length. In this example, the patient is presented with marginal hair loss after removal of a glued wig.
Figure 6Trichoscopy of traction alopecia demonstrates cylindrical hair casts along several hair shafts.
Figure 7Histology of traction alopecia. On horizontal sections at the level of the low follicular level, there is altered follicular architecture due to areas of follicular drop out. There are only four follicles (hematoxylin and eosin, ×2).
Figure 8Histology of traction alopecia. On horizontal sections at the level of the isthmus, there is an overall preserved follicular architecture but significantly reduced follicular density (total of nine follicles). The terminal: vellus ratio is 2:1. The sebaceous glands are mostly preserved (hematoxylin and eosin, ×2).
Summary of the distinguishing clinical, trichosopic, and pathologic findings in patients with patchy alopecias
| Hair condition | Clinical presentation | Trichoscopy | Pathology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traction alopecia | Early: localized areas of non-cicatricial alopecia and hair thinning around areas of mechanical trauma, perifollicular erythema, and pustules | Broken hair shafts | Decreased terminal hairs |
| Trichotillomania | Patches of non-cicatricial alopecia in accessible areas on scalp | Broken hairs at different length | Increased catagen count (up to 70%) |
| Alopecia areata | Patches of non-cicatricial alopecia, variable location | Exclamation mark hairs | Non-scarring alopecia |
| Patchy central centrifugal cicatricial alopecia | Patches of cicatricial alopecia diffusely throughout scalp but mostly on parietal scalp | Peripilar white-gray halo | Follicular drop-out |
| Frontal fibrosing alopecia | Frontotemporal band-like cicatricial alopecia | Peripilar casts | Perifollicular fibrosis |