A practical guide to the standardisation of hair loss photography for clinicians.

Clin Exp Dermatol

Salford Royal Hospital, Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, UK.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global and trichoscopic photography are important for assessing hair loss, but there's a lack of standardized protocols for their use.
  • The article aims to develop practical photography protocols for clinicians and medical photographers by using established disease severity scales for various hair loss conditions.
  • Three main protocols are introduced based on different types of hair loss, along with additional guidelines for specific clinical scenarios, enabling high-quality imaging for better evaluation and research in hair loss disorders.

Article Abstract

Background: Global and trichoscopic photography are fundamental in the clinical assessment of hair loss. Standardised protocols in this respect are lacking.

Objectives: To create novel, pragmatic and flexible standardised photography protocols for hair loss, which are practical to use for clinicians and medical photographers alike.

Methods: Published disease severity scales for a variety of hair loss conditions were utilised to create standardised photography protocols. There were reviewed and refined by a national clinical working group of consultant dermatologists specialising in hair loss.

Results: Three main presentation-based protocols are presented, defined by the type of hair loss a patient may present with; including pattern loss, frontal fibrosing alopecia/traction alopecia and alopecia areata and other patchy hair loss disorders. Additional supplementary protocols facilitate further specific views for a variety of individualised clinical scenarios, based on user discretion.

Conclusions: We present novel, pragmatic, standardised photography protocols for hair loss disorders. These can be used by clinicians even where formal medical photography units are unavailable. Standardisation allows high-quality, informative images for objective assessment and monitoring of hair loss in clinical practice, as well as in research settings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ced/llae341DOI Listing

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