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Your Good Health: Leg-hair loss may be iron-related

Dear Dr. Roach: I am a 61-year-old male. Most of the hair around the outside and front of my legs has disappeared. My family doctor sent me to have the blood pressure in my legs checked and get a testosterone test, both normal.

Dear Dr. Roach: I am a 61-year-old male. Most of the hair around the outside and front of my legs has disappeared. My family doctor sent me to have the blood pressure in my legs checked and get a testosterone test, both normal. He sent me to a neurologist and all the tests there were normal. The neurologist told me he, too, had the same problem. I take only 81 mg aspirin, and a dermatologist said the hair loss is not due to a skin condition.

D.S.

 

Hair loss on the legs is not a common condition. I agree with your family doctor — he was looking for peripheral vascular disease, the most common cause of hair loss on the legs, in my experience.

However, I also would consider a few less-common diagnoses. The first is hemochromatosis. You are the right age and sex to have this genetic condition, in which the intestines absorb too much iron. The iron overload can affect many systems, and hair loss is occasionally the first one. It can be diagnosed easily with blood tests.

The second is thyroid disease: It can cause hair loss anywhere, especially in patches. I suspect your doctor may already have tested you for this. Finally, low adrenal-hormone levels occasionally show up with leg-hair loss. Loss of adrenal hormone, Addison’s syndrome, can be serious, because these hormones are necessary for responding to stress. Usually, though, people with Addison’s have other symptoms first, especially fatigue. Sadly, even these days, doctors are unable to answer why many things in the body happen.

 

Dear Dr. Roach: Recently you had an explanation of types of hernias. I am told I have a hiatal hernia, along with reflux. I am taking one Nexium 40-mg tablet daily. Could you please elaborate on this type of hernia?

V.K.

 

A hiatal hernia isn’t like the types of hernias I discussed last time. The esophagus, the muscular tube that carries food from your mouth to the stomach, has to pass through the diaphragm, the sheet of muscle that separates your chest from your abdomen. The hole in the diaphragm that the esophagus goes through is called the hiatus.

In some people, the hiatus is large enough that part of the stomach passes through it and ends up in the chest. This is a hiatal hernia, and by itself, it probably causes no symptoms in most people, but it does increase the risk of esophageal reflux — the acid contents of the stomach back up into the esophagus. This is bad not only because it causes symptoms — including heartburn, cough or regurgitation — but because the esophagus can’t deal with acid the way the stomach can. The esophagus can become damaged, causing an increased risk of esophageal cancer. Your doctor has given you a medicine that keeps your stomach from being able to make acid, protecting your esophagus and usually relieving cough and heartburn but not regurgitation.