Hair guideHair-Loss GlossaryRetrograde alopecia

Retrograde alopecia

Last updated: 2026-06-14

Thinning that creeps upward into the lower donor area at the back and sides of the scalp — normally the DHT-resistant 'safe zone'. It matters for transplant planning, because grafts taken from an unstable retrograde donor may themselves thin over time.

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Sources: AAD ↗

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Not medical advice. General education only; it does not replace diagnosis or treatment by a licensed professional. Consult a board-certified dermatologist before starting, stopping or changing any treatment.

⚠️ When to see a doctor — don’t self-treat

  • Sudden patchy or circular bald spots
  • Redness, scaling, pus, pain or itch (possible scarring alopecia — treat urgently)
  • Broken hairs or rapid loss
  • Loss with body-wide signs (weight loss, fatigue, cycle changes, acne, extra hair)
  • Loss right after a new medication
  • Any hair loss in a child
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