Study of the Thyroid Profile of Patients with Alopecia

Author:

Popa Adelina1,Carsote Mara2ORCID,Cretoiu Dragos3ORCID,Dumitrascu Mihai Cristian4,Nistor Claudiu-Eduard5ORCID,Sandru Florica1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatovenerology, “Carol Davila University” of Medicine and Pharmacy & “Elias” University Emergency Hospital, 011461 Bucharest, Romania

2. Department of Endocrinology, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy & “C.I. Parhon” National Institute of Endocrinology, 011461 Bucharest, Romania

3. Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology, and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy & National Institute for Mother and Child Health Alessandrescu-Rusescu, 011461 Bucharest, Romania

4. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy & University Emergency Hospital, 011461 Bucharest, Romania

5. Department 4–Cardio-Thoracic Pathology, Thoracic Surgery II Discipline, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy & Thoracic Surgery Department, “Carol Davila” Central Emergency University Military Hospital, 011461 Bucharest, Romania

Abstract

Thyroid hormones are required for the physiological growth and maintenance of hair follicles. We aim to study the thyroid profile of patients with alopecia. This is a narrative review. PubMed literature was searched from 2013 to 2022. We followed different types of alopecia: alopecia areata (AA), androgenic alopecia in males and females, telogen effluvium (TE), frontal fibrosing alopecia (FFA), lichen planopilaris, and alopecia neoplastica (AN). AA shares a common autoimmune background with autoimmune thyroid diseases, either sporadic or belonging to autoimmune polyglandular syndromes. Some data suggested that AA is more severe if thyroid anomalies are confirmed, including subclinical dysfunction or positive antithyroid antibodies with normal hormone values. However, routine thyroid screening for patients with AA, if the patients are asymptomatic from a thyroid point of view and they have negative personal and family history of autoimmunity, remains controversial. TE, apart from the autoimmune type, associates thyroid anomalies of a hormonal assay (between 5.7% and 17%). FFA, mostly a postmenopausal entity (however, not exclusive), associates a higher prevalence of thyroid conditions (up to 50%) than the general population. However, these might have an age-dependent pattern, thus the association may be incidental since there are a limited number of studies. Overall, alopecia remains a very challenging condition for patients and physicians; a multidisciplinary team is required to improve the outcome and quality of life. The common autoimmune background is suggestive of some types of alopecia and thyroid disorders, yet, the underlying mechanisms are still a matter of debate. AA, TE, FFA, LPP, and, potentially, female pattern hair loss have been found to be connected with thyroid entities, thus a state of awareness from a dual perspective, of trichology and endocrinology, is helpful.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference124 articles.

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