THE AFRO-ETHNIC FOLLICLE KILLER: CCCA

THE AFRO-ETHNIC FOLLICLE KILLER: CCCA

In 2015 a middle-aged woman walked into my office, her face dull, hairline shiny and sparse beneath a wig. “What’s happening to your hair, mum?” I asked. She hesitated, then said, “I have a lot of hair problems; I don’t think you’ve seen a case like this.” I smiled and reassured her: “I see very bad hair problems every day — relax, remove the wig and show me.” When she did, the view was startling.

Underneath the wig was extensive hair loss: coalescing patches on the vertex and thinning along the hairline. She’d cut off her 16-year-old locks, convinced that her hairline was receding from the tension of tight, heavy styling. On closer inspection the scalp was unlike anything I’d seen — a rough terrain with tiny swellings around follicle openings. I suspected CCCA; a biopsy later confirmed it. Traction alopecia had also taken toll on the hair line and exacerbated the inflammation on the vertex.

Central Centrifugal Cicatricial Alopecia was first described in 1968 as “Hot Comb Alopecia,” predominantly seen in Afro-ethnic women. Over time, however, cases emerged in women who never used hot combs, revealing that styling heat alone could not explain it. Attention shifted to hair relaxers, dyes, curl softening chemicals and chronic traction from tight or heavy hairstyles.

The term evolved to Follicular Degeneration Syndrome (FDS), and in 2011 the North American Hair Research Society standardized the name as Central Centrifugal Cicatricial Alopecia (CCCA) to unify hair restoration experts on the subjects.

Research shows that premature desquamation of the inner root sheath — the protective layer guiding a growing hair — peels off prematurely allowing chemicals or bacteria to penetrate and damage the follicle. Once the follicle has benne damaged the end result is a scar tissue feeling up the space. Some studies hint at a genetic predisposition to CCCA, but definitive evidence remains limited. What’s clear is the disease’s hallmark: persistent inflammation that slowly destroys follicles and scars the scalp, beginning at the crown and spreading outward.

CCCA is challenging to treat, but not hopeless. Avoiding tight styles, heavy extensions, dyes, relaxers, and perming products can halt further trauma and improve the chances of regrowth, depending on damage severity. I’ve observed notable improvement in patients who also reduced alcohol, lactose, and wheat intake — suggesting gut health and systemic inflammation may play a role.

More and more understanding of the condition is happening however it still remains an elusive puzzle that awaits to be fully understood. 

In the meantime; if you notice itching, scalp dryness at the crown, inflamed scalp, or thinning from the center outward, seek evaluation promptly — early detection gives the best chance to stop progression and preserve hair.

 

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Hairhub Trichology Centre