Anagen Hairs (anagen + hair)

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Terms modified by Anagen Hairs

  • anagen hair follicle

  • Selected Abstracts


    Effect of Wax Epilation Before Hair Removal With a Long-Pulsed Alexandrite Laser: A Pilot Study

    DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 2 2003
    Michael S. Lehrer MD
    Background. Recent reports indicate that laser hair removal is most effective on anagen hairs. However, no published trials have examined laser epilation after hair cycle synchronization. Objective. To evaluate the potential for enhanced laser hair removal after the induction of telogen hairs into anagen by wax epilation. Methods. We identified four 2.5-cm square areas with equivalent hair length and density on the backs of 13 dark-haired white men. To induce typically telogen hairs into anagen, two areas on each patient were wax epilated. Two weeks later, one waxed area and one unwaxed area were treated with a long-pulsed alexandrite laser. One month after laser treatment, a subjective comparison was made based on hair density, length, and thickness. Results. In 12 of 13 patients, lasered areas that had been pretreated with wax epilation were clearer of hair as compared with areas that had been pretreated by shaving (P=0.0034). No significant difference was noted between waxed and unwaxed control areas that had not been laser treated (P=1.0). Conclusion. Wax epilation 2 weeks before laser hair removal improves cosmetic outcomes at 1 month. This effect may be secondary to the recruitment and heightened sensitivity of early anagen hairs. [source]


    A Girl with Loose Anagen Hair Syndrome and Uncombable, Spun-glass Hair

    PEDIATRIC DERMATOLOGY, Issue 3 2005
    Abigail J. Lee MC
    A hair pull test revealed that hairs could be easily and painlessly extracted. Light microscopic examination of the hair demonstrated anagen hairs with a ruffled cuticle and distorted bulb as well as an unusual undulation and grooving of the shafts. These findings are consistent with both loose anagen and uncombable hair syndromes. The occurrence of both syndromes in the same patient seems unlikely, and we propose that our patient has loose anagen hair syndrome with features resembling uncombable hair syndrome. [source]


    Loose anagen syndrome: A prospective study of three families

    AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
    Alvin H Chong
    SUMMARY Loose anagen syndrome (LAS) is an autosomal dominant, age-related disorder characterized by the ability to easily and painlessly extract unsheathed anagen hairs from the scalp with a gentle hair pull. The phenotype is heterogeneous with three distinct clinical presentations. To further characterize the phenotype of loose anagen syndrome and its fluctuations over time, a prospective study of eight cases from three families was conducted over a period of 18 months. Patients were examined using standardized hair-pull and hair-pluck protocols. Each of the three different phenotypes of LAS were found to be present in one family. This implies that these phenotypes are variants of a single genotype, modified by environmental or age-related factors. The hair-pluck trichogram from LAS cases consistently showed a high proportion of loose anagen (LA) hairs. In contrast the hair-pull test was found to vary over time with regards to the number of LA hairs that could be extracted. Periods where no hairs could be obtained on hair pull were found. These findings have important implications in the diagnosis of LAS. A single negative hair-pull test does not exclude the diagnosis. If LAS is suspected on clinical grounds, then either a hair-pluck trichogram or serial re-examination by hair pull would be required to exclude the diagnosis. [source]