Cigarette smoking was significantly associated with androgenetic alopecia after investigators controlled for age and family history in a community-based survey conducted in Taiwan.
Androgenetic alopecia, the most common type of hair loss in men, is known to be a hereditary disorder, but environmental factors are presumed to play a role in pathogenesis as well. Three earlier studies addressed a possible link with cigarette smoking, but their results were inconsistent, the Taiwanese investigators wrote (Arch. Dermatol. 2007;143:14016).
Dr. Lin-Hui Su of Far Eastern Memorial Hospital and Tony Hsiu-Hsi Chen, Ph.D., D.D.S., of National Taiwan University, both in Taipei, surveyed 740 men from the general population aged 4091 years who were found to have cosmetically significant male-pattern baldness.
After controlling for the effects of age and family history, they found that current and former smokers were significantly more likely to have moderate or severe androgenetic alopecia than were men who had never smoked (odds ratio 1.8). Men who currently smoked at least 20 cigarettes per day had more than double the risk of those who had never smoked (odds ratio 2.3).
Smoking intensitydefined as duration of smoking in years multiplied by the number of cigarettes smoked per daywas positively correlated with the degree of baldness.
Although this study did not assess the mechanisms by which smoking may promote hair loss, the investigators proposed four possibilities.
"First, smoking might be deleterious to the microvasculature of the dermal hair papilla. Second, smoke genotoxicants may do damage to DNA of the hair follicle," they said.
Third, smoking may cause an imbalance in the follicular protease or antiprotease systems. "Smoking-induced oxidative stress may lead to the release of proinflammatory cytokines that, in turn, results in follicular microinflammation and fibrosis."
Fourth, smoking may induce a hypo-estrogenic state by increasing the hydroxylation of estradiol and the inhibition of aromatase.