Guys - it's late, i'm tired but i have been reading through some papers about auto-immune diseases (ADs) and found a nice paper - you can read it in full here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1299128/. The line that immediately stuck out to me was:
"The central role of sex hormones is quite obvious, as they modulate T-cell receptor signalling, activation of cytokine genes and lymphocyte homing."
Mind you this is a paper about ADs in general, yet they are highlighting the role of sex hormones as being "obvious"; this is in relation to ADs affecting women much more than men. However, i can't help but wonder how that proportion would change if Androgenetic Alopecia was considered an AD; and what would that mean regarding the abundant DHT and its role in triggering an autoimmune reaction against our lovely follicles?
This of course lead me to ponder whether a full immune system transplant via haematopoietic stem-cell transplants (HSCTs) would be effective at resolving the issue. The examples i could find were for Alopecia Universalis, see here: http://www.bloodjournal.org/content/bloodjournal/105/1/426.full.pdf?sso-checked=true
A couple of things are noticeable:
- The amount of regrowth in such a short period of time challenges everything we know about how long it takes for hair growth to take place
- Even as the regrowth takes place, there is still an Androgenetic Alopecia pattern visible - whether this stayed the case i don't know, but if it did then the mechanisms may be different (though related)
My current belief (unscientific) is that all forms of Alopecia are varying degrees of the same Autoimmune Disease caused by an overactive immune system responding to what it perceives as a foreign "threat" (hair) as indicated by the large accumulation of sex hormones (DHT) on the scalp. I'm not looking for a debate or anything - i just wanted to share what i found in case someone found it of interest. I'll continue researching this to try to understand this angle of the issue better.
