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A pill for hair-pulling compulsion

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/8132387.stm

 

A simple supplement could help treat people with an impulse disorder that

manifests in hair-tearing, say experts.

 

Trichotillomania suffers are blighted by uncontrollable urges to pluck the hair

of the scalp and even eyebrows and lashes, often to the point of baldness.

 

Although seen as a behavioural and psychological problem, scientists are hopeful

that the problem could be solved with an amino acid pill.

 

Archives of General Psychiatry reports promising early trial findings.

 

A group of 50 people with trichotillomania were asked to take part in a 12-week

trial of the pill containing the amino acid N-acetylcysteine.

 

The same supplement has shown promise for treating people with compulsive

disorders and is thought to work on the glutamate system, the largest nerve

signal transmission system in the human brain.

 

Indeed, some studies suggest that abnormalities in the natural brain chemicals

serotonin and dopamine may play a role in trichotillomania, although genes may

also be involved.

 

In the trial, half of the volunteers were given the treatment and the other half

a dummy pill.

 

After 12 weeks, patients taking the active medication had significantly greater

reductions in hair-pulling symptoms than those taking placebo.

 

Overall, 56% of patients were considered to be " much or very much improved " with

N-acetylcysteine use compared with 16% taking placebo.

 

Additional therapy

 

And N-acetylcysteine compared favourably with existing treatment options.

 

The magnitude of improvement seen in patients taking the amino acid pills was

greater than that reported with other medications and was similar to that

reported for cognitive behaviour therapy alone or combined with medication, such

as antidepressants.

 

Dr Jon Grant, of the University of Minnesota School of Medicine, and his

co-authors, said: " N-acetylcysteine could be an effective treatment option for

people with trichotillomania. "

 

But they said the underlying causes of trichotillomania should still be tackled

using cognitive behavioural therapy. And more work will be needed to prove that

supplements, which can be bought in health shops, do actually work

 

Trichotillomania may affect up to 5% of the population, although getting a

handle on the exact prevalence is difficult, partly because sufferers may hide

their condition and be too embarrassed to seek help.

 

Hair-pulling most commonly begins in the early teens, although it can start at a

much younger or older age, and in some cases can be linked to a stressful life

event like the death of a family member.

 

For some, hair-pulling can be seen as a soothing behaviour that is driven by

rising tension.

 

For others, hair-pulling is undertaken during times of relaxation and is a habit

that is to some extent subconscious.

 

Once the hair has been pulled it is often played with or eaten rather than

immediately discarded.

 

Trichotillomania shares some common features with obsessive compulsive disorder,

and is probably linked to common genetic factors, but it is not the same

condition.

 

 

 

 

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