Hair & skin · evaluated online

Hair loss treatment

Hair loss is treatable — and earlier intervention works better than late. Finasteride and minoxidil have decades of evidence. A clinician can match the right regimen to you.

Licensed clinicians · Evidence-based therapy
Hair loss (male and female pattern)
Start soonerEarlier treatment works better
Proven optionsFinasteride, minoxidil, more
Common Rx
Finasteride / minoxidil
Time to feel better
3–6 months to see results
Contagious
No
Telehealth fit
Excellent fit

What is hair loss?

Male pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia) affects about half of men by age 50. It's genetic and driven by dihydrotestosterone (DHT) acting on susceptible hair follicles — temples recede, crown thins, eventually leaving a "horseshoe" pattern.

Female pattern hair loss affects women too, typically as diffuse thinning across the top of the scalp rather than receding hairline.

Other causes include telogen effluvium (stress, post-pregnancy, illness — usually temporary), alopecia areata (autoimmune — patchy bald spots), traction alopecia (tight hairstyles), and medication side effects.

Proven treatments: finasteride (blocks DHT production), minoxidil (stimulates hair growth via unclear mechanism — both topical and oral), dutasteride (stronger DHT blocker), and procedural options like PRP and hair transplant. Earlier treatment works better.

Do I have hair loss? Common signs

If most of these describe what you're experiencing, telehealth is a reasonable next step:

Receding hairline (especially temples) Thinning at the crown Visible scalp through hair More hair in shower drain or on pillow Family history of hair loss Sometimes itching or scalp tenderness For women: widening part, reduced hair density on top of scalp
Here's how it actually works
01
Tell us what's going on5-minute online intake covers your symptoms, history, and any photos.
02
A clinician reviewsLicensed in your state. Reviews your case and asks anything needed.
03
Rx to your pharmacyIf treatment is appropriate, the prescription goes to the pharmacy you choose.

What causes it

Androgenetic alopecia is genetic — sensitivity of follicles to DHT, a testosterone metabolite. Other causes: thyroid disease, iron deficiency, autoimmune (alopecia areata), medications, severe stress or illness (telogen effluvium), pregnancy-related changes, scalp infections, and certain hair styling practices.

Is it contagious?

No.

Hair you keep is hair you don't have to grow back — early treatment preserves what's there.

Can it be treated online?

Hair loss evaluation works extremely well by telehealth. A clinician reviews your history (pattern, duration, family history, medications, recent illnesses), looks at photos of the affected area, screens for non-pattern causes, considers labs when indicated, and prescribes treatment.

In-person evaluation may be needed for: patchy hair loss that may be alopecia areata, scarring alopecia, suspected scalp infection, or comprehensive workup of female hair loss when other causes are suspected.

How hair loss is treated

Finasteride: 1 mg daily oral — blocks 5-alpha reductase, lowering DHT. About 80% of men see stabilization or improvement over 6–12 months. Continued treatment is needed — stopping reverses gains within months.

Minoxidil: topical 5% solution or foam twice daily; or low-dose oral minoxidil (off-label, increasingly used) — stimulates hair growth. Works for both men and women.

Combination: finasteride + minoxidil is more effective than either alone for many men.

Dutasteride: stronger 5-alpha reductase inhibitor; sometimes used when finasteride alone isn't enough.

For women: minoxidil, spironolactone (anti-androgen), and oral contraceptives can help in selected cases.

Procedural: PRP (platelet-rich plasma), low-level laser therapy, hair transplantation — generally not first-line.

Self-care while you wait

When to skip telehealth and seek emergency care Sudden, dramatic hair loss in patches (possible alopecia areata or scarring alopecia), hair loss with significant scalp redness, scaling, or pain, hair loss after starting a new medication — these need timely in-person evaluation.

How long does it last?

Pattern hair loss is progressive and lifelong without treatment. With treatment, most men maintain or improve their hair over years to decades. Stopping treatment leads to loss of gained hair within 3–12 months — treatment is generally lifelong.

Frequently asked questions

Does finasteride cause sexual side effects?

A small percentage of men report sexual side effects (reduced libido, ED, ejaculatory issues). In clinical trials these rates are low and often resolve with continued use or discontinuation. Discuss any concerns with the clinician — sometimes lower doses or topical formulations are options.

Does minoxidil work for receding hairlines?

Minoxidil works best for thinning at the crown and is less effective for frontal hairline recession. Finasteride may help frontal areas more.

How long until I see results?

Typically 3–6 months on consistent treatment. Some men see early shedding ("dread shed") in the first few weeks of minoxidil as resting hairs are pushed out by new growth — this passes.

Is it worth doing PRP or laser?

Evidence for PRP and low-level laser is more limited than for finasteride/minoxidil. They're generally considered after maximizing medical therapy or in patients who can't tolerate medications.

Should I consider hair transplant?

Hair transplant can be excellent for the right candidate — typically after maximizing medical therapy, with stable hair loss pattern, sufficient donor hair, realistic expectations. Combining with medical therapy is usual.

This page is for general information only — not a substitute for individual medical advice. A licensed clinician reviews every intake submitted through PrescriberNow before any prescription is issued. If you're experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

Hair thinning? Start treatment.

Finasteride and minoxidil are proven, well-tolerated, and most effective when started early.

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