The development of non-scarring alopecia in women who wear the hijab

Author:

Ceresnie Marissa S.1,Mohney Lindsey2,Seale Lauren1,Fahs Fatima3,Mohammad Tasneem F.1

Affiliation:

1. Henry Ford Health

2. University Hospitals Geauga Medical Center

3. Wayne State University

Abstract

Abstract Little is known about hair loss associated with wearing the hijab, a religious head covering worn by Muslim women. We performed a single-center analysis to investigate the association between various forms of non-scarring alopecia and wearing the hijab. This study included 125 patients who wore the hijab and 40 race/ethnicity-matched women who did not wear the hijab. Among the 165 total patients diagnosed between January 2015 and March 2022, 71 had telogen effluvium, 78 had female pattern hair loss, and 16 had traction alopecia. We found patients who wore the hijab had a younger mean age of alopecia onset than patients who did not wear the hijab (31.5 vs. 37.3 years; P = 0.02). Our study suggests that vitamin D deficiency (OR 4.1; 95% CI 1.2–14.1; P = 0.02) and seborrheic dermatitis (OR 2.9; 95% CI 1.1–8.1; P = 0.03) may significantly impact the development of telogen effluvium in patients who wear the hijab. Targeting these risk factors among patients who wear the hijab may be considered to prevent hair loss.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference5 articles.

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3. Dermatological considerations and culturally sensitive recommendations for women who wear the hijab;Rehman R;Br J Dermatol,2022

4. Hijab and hair loss: A cross-sectional analysis of information on youtube;Shareef SJ;Int J Dermatol,2022

5. Skin microbiome alterations in seborrheic dermatitis and dandruff: A systematic review;Tao R;Exp Dermatol,2021

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