Daily Column

DEAR DR. GOTT:
I am 72 years young, active, and do all my own housework. I recently read your letter concerning hair loss after taking medication. I am on three medications and three over-the-counters. The first drug is lisinopril 20 mg tabs, one and a half pills every day. The second is prednisone 4 mg daily prescribed by a rheumatologist because of rheumatoid arthritis . The third is blood pressure medicine known as metoprolol 50 mg that I’ve been on for over four years. I was taking one in the morning and a half every evening until my doctor increased the medication to two a day.

My over-the-counter drugs are a one-a-day multi-vitamin, calcium 1000 mg plus D daily, and calcium citrate 315 mg with 200 IU of vitamin D.

Years ago I noticed hair loss and attributed it to the metoprolol. The problem keeps increasing and, in fact, if it continues, I will need a wig in another year. I mentioned the problem to my doctor and her reply was that all medicines make people lose hair. Would I be wrong in asking my doctor to take me off the metoprolol and prescribe another medication for my high blood pressure? I showed her the drug information provided by my pharmacy indicating hair loss as a side effect.

I recently changed primary care physicians since my first doctor wasn’t concerned at all about my hair loss. What can I do?

DEAR READER:
Let me begin with some general information. Medications must go through several clinical studies before being approved. This is done by giving thousands of people a drug, while others are given a placebo. During the studies, no participant knows if he or she is taking the real thing or a placebo. An adverse consequence in more than 1% of the people studied in both categories is referred to as a common side effect, while less than that amount is referred to as rare. Once a drug is approved, it is no longer studied.

Now for the bad news. You are on lisinopril, metoprolol and prednisone. Rare side effects of all three drugs list hair loss as a possibility. Steroids are known to precipitate hair loss in men, yet all women have some male hormones. Therefore, of the prescription medications you take, all three share a similar consequence. The good news, according to my resources, is that the hair loss is generally reversible once a drug is discontinued.

It could be difficult in your situation to determine which drug might be causing your hair loss, unless you kept meticulous records indicating when the pattern began. As we age, we suffer wrinkles, heart problems, hypertension, arthritis and more. It’s difficult enough dealing with the problems over which we have little control. We shouldn’t have to deal with balding when it might be preventable. I recommend you speak with your new primary care physician who might be able to prescribe different medications in each instance without such an emotionally devastating side effect, no matter how rare it might be.

To give you related information, I am sending you a copy of my Health Report “Consumer Tips on Medicines”. Other readers who would like a copy should send a self-addressed, stamped number 10 envelope and $2 to Newsletter, PO Box 167, Wickliffe, OH 44092. Be sure to mention the title.

Daily Column

DEAR DR. GOTT:
Thank you for all your good advice. I would like to share two tips that have helped me.

The first one is for snoring. I use two pillows instead of one which raises my head and stops the snoring.

The second is hair loss. I started losing my hair after starting a high protein diet. I began taking a folic acid supplement (400 micrograms daily). Not only has my hair stopped falling out, it has gotten much fuller and I can no longer see my scalp through my hair.

I hope this helps someone else as much as it has helped me.

DEAR READER:
Thanks for the tips. I have received many letters regardingthe use of a folic acid supplement to stop hair loss.

To give you related information, I am sending you a copy of my Health Report “Dr. Gott’s Compelling Home Remedies”. Other readers who would like a copy should send a self-addressed, stamped number 10 envelope and $2 to Newsletter, PO Box 167, Wickliffe, OH 44092. Be sure to mention the title.

Daily Column

DEAR DR. GOTT:
I, too, am a woman who suffered with hair loss. I was surprised you did not suggest any dietary changes or supplements to help the woman who wrote in about hair loss. It seems to me that over the last 50 years (since entering the work force), more and more women are losing their hair.

I first started losing my hair when I was 16. A neighbor who was a nurse told me to take vitamin B1 (thiamine). It worked wonderfully. Many years later, I started losing my hair again. I read a book that recommended taking a B complex with extra biotin, inositol, and choline. I tried it and this also worked well for me. About two years later, it happened again. This time I used the same B complex with extra choline, inositol, and biotin as before, but didn’t stop taking it this time. I now use it every day and my hair is thicker and healthier than it ever was. I am 65.

DEAR READER:
Thank you for writing. You have offered yet another possible remedy to hair loss. I have received dozens of letters with various treatments for hair loss ranging from folic acid to B vitamins to special shampoos.

I have had no experience with using B complex but have received several letters that recommend it. I am publishing your letter for my readers who wish to try it. Please, readers, let me know your what has or has not worked for you. I will publish a follow-up with the most successful therapies and will put them in my next home remedies Health Report.

As an aside, it seems that many readers have had success using a B complex supplement in treating many ills. Perhaps there is more to the vitamin B family than is currently known. Or maybe, Americans simply don’t get enough B vitamins in their daily diet and some of our health issues stem from a deficiency.

To give you related information, I am sending you a copy of my Health Report “Dr. Gott’s Compelling Home Remedies”. Other readers who would like a copy should send a self-addressed, stamped number 10 envelope and $2 to Newsletter, PO Box 167, Wickliffe, OH 44092. Be sure to mention the title.