Types of Baldness
Type I is reserved for people with no hair loss. Dr Hamilton described it has “the abscence of bilateral recessions along the anterior border of the hair line in frontoparietal regions". In other words there is no evidence of a ‘widows peak’. Dr Hamilton also suggested a variation on type I classed as type IA. Type IA was reserved for men with a very high hair line on the forehead. However, this high hairline was not due to any hair line recession; it was simply present as a result of genetic inheritance and family features.
In developing the scale, Dr Hamilton recognised that up to 96% of men and 79% of women reach at least ‘hair loss stage two’ after full pubertal sexual maturation. He claimed 58% of men over the age of 50 had hair loss resembling patterns type V to type VIII with the extent of hair loss stabilising at around 70 years of age. He also claimed that by 50 years of age, 25% of women had developed type IV hair loss. The extent of hair loss apparently stabilised once women were over the age of 50. |