How often is hair loss a side effect of common medicines?
A numeric value is actually pretty hard to track down. The reason it is so hard to find is that the people who are responsible for tracking side effects of medications usually worry about and record the most life-threatening and severe side effects. Hair loss, while it can be personally devastating and life changing for an individual is not considered a severe enough side effect to warrant an intricate warning system the way heart failure, liver damage or blindness would. While we can all agree that hair loss is not as severe a side effect as these other clinical problems may be it would be ignorant of anyone to say hair loss does not matter. Hair loss is a life altering experience to those who have to live with it and those who must cope with a bald head.
Unfortunately many very common medications have been shown to cause hair loss. And worse news is that some of these medications can be absolutely critical to maintaining good health. Knowing which medications can lead to hair loss is a first step, but do not stop taking your medications without first consulting your doctor. Some of the medications below, like warfarin, are used to prevent serious complications of illnesses like strokes and heart attacks. So be cautious when evaluating your hair loss and seek expert medical opinion before you stop potentially life-saving medicine.
Aspirin
Aspirin is widely known as a blood thinner but it actually makes blood less sticky rather than thinning it out. It directly alters the way platelets stick together making your blood less likely to clot. It is a very good medicine for preventing strokes and heart attacks; it is cheap, and relatively safe. It can cause some life threatening side effects like GI bleeds, but it is also a well-known cause of baldness and hair loss (Blann, 2002). The way this occurs is not clear, but aspirin has been associated with hair loss for many years. The good news is that aspirin is one of many drugs that thin the blood and as such there may be a different medicine you can take if you began suffering from hair loss after starting aspirin. In cases where aspirin is the cause of hair loss, stopping the medicine will actually stop your hair loss.
Allopurinol
This is a very old medication that is very good at treating gout. Gout if a very painful inflammatory arthritis, but luckily it is very responsive to allopurinol. Allopurinol works so well in treating gout that if you have this disease the changes that you are on this medicine is very high. It is a first choice medication for treating gout. Unfortunately allopurinol is also a well-known cause of hair loss. There is a severe reaction to this medication known as allopurinol sensitivity syndrome that causes quick and severe hair loss, very significant rash and renal failure (Singer, 1986). A more mild form of reaction to this medication may just be increasing hair loss and decreased regrowth of hair. This will show up as progressive balding and hair thinning. Allopurinol shouldn’t be stopped without discussing with your doctor, gout is a very painful condition and you do not want to have flair up, but there are other options for gout and if you are experiencing hair loss from allopurinol you should ask your doctor about changing to a different medication to treat the gout.
Carbamazepine
Carbamazepine is sold under the name tegretol. It is a medicine used for epilepsy, headaches, migraines, neuropathies and trigeminal neuralgia. In some places it is also used as a mood stabilizer in psychiatric disorders, although this would be an uncommon use in the United States. Carbamazepine is a very good drug for treating seizures and is a first line drug for treating trigeminal and hypoglossal neuralgia. In many cases of seizure onset after a traumatic head injury or a stroke the patient will be put on carbamazepine as a first attempt at controlling the seizures. As such, carbamazepine is a very commonly used drug. It can also lead to hair loss and the hair loss associated with this medicine can be profound (Ikeda, 1997). As with the other medications it is a bad idea to stop taking carbamazepine without first notifying your doctor. Suddenly topping this medication can cause you to go into status epilepticus a very dangerous and hard to control seizure syndrome. The good news is that the hair loss associated with carbamazepine is reversible if the medication is stopped, and better news is that there are many other good alternatives to carbamazepine if you are having side effects from this medication (Shuper, 1985). If you have begun carbamazepine and began no notice hair loss and baldness, speak to your doctor about other alternative medicines. Many are available and one may be the better choice for you.
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