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Trichotillomania Causes Symptoms Information With Treatment by :
Juliet Cohen
Hair pulling can occur on any part of the body where hair grows. The most common area of hair pulling is the scalp. Hair pulling is divided two types focused pulling and nonfocused (or automatic) pulling. Focused pulling is an intentional act to control aversive feelings. Nonfocused pulling is generally a habitual type of pulling. Patients in dermatological clinics largely are in the latter group. Some patients show both subtypes of hair pulling together or with various overlapping behaviors. However, hair pulling also can occur on the eyebrows, eyelashes, pubic region, and any other area of the body with hair. The alopecia that results from hair pulling can range from small undetectable areas of hair loss to total baldness. Pulling hairs from other objects or people: Occasionally, patients may engage in hair pulling or plucking from other people, pets, dolls, or other fibrous materials (eg, carpets). In trichotemnomania, a rare condition, the scalp looks like an alopecia totalis but all follicle openings are uniformly filled with hair material. The condition is an obsessive-compulsive habit of cutting or shaving the hair and is different from trichotillomania. Habit reversal training (HRT), a cognitive behavioral therapy, has been successfully used in the treatment of trichotillomania. selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) are commonly given to improve symptoms.
Prozac is a common SSRI. Drugs in this class given to treat trichotillomania in children include sertraline (Zoloft), fluvoxamine (Luvox), and clomioramine.
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