Only a little background...
Two and a half weeks ago I had two moles removed from my abdomen. The procedure left me with two wounds each an inch long.
Before the surgery I shaved the area around the moles. Just to make
sure the Doctor didn't cover my fur with med tape. After the surgery, the
hair around the wounds grew back at about a normal rate.
Two weeks after the procedure I went back to my derms office to have
the stitches removed. Before heading to the derm's office, I shaved and
clipped all the body hair around the wounds.
At the derms office, a nurse removed the stitches and cleaned the
wounds then she applied Dermabond over the wounds and surgical strips
on top of that.
36 hours later, I decided to remove the strips and noticed the hair in
the area where the Dermabond was applied was 4 to 6 times longer than
the surrounding hair.
What do you think caused the sudden growth spurt?
At first I thought it was the Dermabond.
Dermabond (2-octylacryonolate) is a close cousin of Krazy Glue. It's a
nonabsorbable tissue adhesive. Studies show it helps wounds heal
quicker. I doubt this caused the growth spurt.
My guess is the removal of the sutures eliminated the stimulus that was
causing a local inflammatory response.
http://www.jci.org/cgi/content/full/110/5/615
Anybody know the answer to these questions?
In male pattern baldness does "injury" to the follicle cause the inflammation or do
androgens trigger the inflammation? Which comes first?
Are there higher concentrations of androgens in areas with
inflammation?
thanks,
Chuj