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July 11, 2026
Common Skin Conditions and How to Treat Them
July 13, 2026A dermatologist. Most people don’t think of one first. The instinct is to visit a family doctor or start searching for supplements online, and neither of those is a bad starting point. A GP can order blood work to check thyroid levels or iron, and that’s useful. But blood tests won’t tell you what’s actually happening on the scalp. That’s where a dermatologist comes in. They use a tool called a trichoscope to look at the follicles directly, which reveals whether the hair loss is something temporary or something that’s been progressing for a while. Getting that part right early on is what separates a targeted treatment plan from months of trial and error with products that were never going to work for your particular situation.
According to Dr. Anju Methil, Dermatologist in Andheri, “Patients often come to me after trying home remedies for months without seeing any change. The problem isn’t that those products are bad. The problem is they were never matched to the actual cause. Once we examine the scalp properly and identify the type of hair loss involved, the treatment becomes far more focused.”
Why is a dermatologist the right specialist for hair fall?
Plenty of patients aren’t sure whether hair fall warrants a specialist or whether their regular doctor can manage it. Here’s what a dermatologist brings that others typically can’t.
They examine the scalp at a level others can’t: GPs assess overall health. Dermatologists go to the scalp itself. With trichoscopy they can spot follicle shrinkage, micro-inflammation, and early structural damage that just isn’t visible during a standard check-up. In a lot of cases, that examination alone reveals the diagnosis before any blood test is ordered.
Hair fall has multiple possible causes: Genetic thinning presents differently from stress-related shedding. A thyroid imbalance follows a different pattern than low iron. Scalp psoriasis can quietly damage follicles for months before anyone connects it to the hair loss. A dermatologist reads these differences clinically and matches treatment to the specific cause rather than hoping a general supplement sorts it out.
They offer treatments you can’t access on your own: Minoxidil and finasteride are widely known, but dermatologists also perform procedures like PRP therapy and GFC injections that target the follicle directly. These need proper patient selection and medical oversight, which is why they belong in a specialist setting.
They track whether treatment is actually working: Judging regrowth on your own is hard because you see yourself every day. A dermatologist compares scalp images across visits, measures density changes, and evaluates whether shedding has genuinely slowed. That objectivity prevents you from giving up on something that’s working or sticking with something that isn’t.
For a plan designed around your specific diagnosis, a personalised hair loss treatment at Skin and Shape Clinic starts with understanding what the scalp is actually telling us.
Hair fall lasting more than a few weeks? Book a consultation with an experienced dermatologist.
When should you see a dermatologist for hair fall?
Earlier than most people do. The majority of patients who walk into a clinic have already been shedding for months before they decided to get it looked at.
The shedding has stepped up: You know your normal. When the hair on your pillow or in the shower drain feels like it’s increased beyond what you’ve always experienced, that shift is worth investigating rather than waiting out.
Your parting looks wider than before: This one develops so gradually that most people miss it until they see a photo taken from above or someone else mentions it. A widening part is one of the earliest signs of diffuse thinning that’s been building under the surface.
Bald patches or clumps appearing: Smooth round spots of hair loss or hair coming out in handfuls isn’t ordinary shedding. Alopecia areata and certain scalp infections behave this way, and getting to a dermatologist quickly makes a real difference in how well the hair recovers.
Hair loss runs in your family: If your parents dealt with noticeable thinning, your own risk is higher. Getting a baseline scalp assessment before the shedding becomes obvious gives you options that simply aren’t available once significant thinning has already set in.
Our blog on GFC hair treatment covers how concentrated growth factors help strengthen weakened follicles and encourage regrowth from within.
Why choose Dr. Anju Methil for hair fall treatment?
Dr. Anju Methil, founder of Skin and Shape Clinic, has been practising dermatology for over 29 years and holds memberships in IADVL, IMA, and CDSI. She won’t recommend treatment before she’s examined the scalp herself. Every consultation starts with trichoscopy and a proper look at what the follicles are doing before any plan is discussed.
What her patients value is that treatment feels built for them individually. Two people with identical complaints might leave with very different plans because the root cause turned out to be different. That willingness to treat the person and not just the symptom is what brings patients back. Call +91 8779911797 to book your consultation.
FAQs
Can a general physician treat hair fall? They can run initial tests but specialised diagnosis and treatment need a dermatologist.
Is hair fall always treatable? Most types respond well when caught and treated early by the right specialist.
How long does hair fall treatment take? Visible improvement generally takes 3 to 6 months of consistent treatment.
Do I need blood tests for hair fall? In many cases yes. They help identify hormonal or nutritional factors behind the shedding.
References
- American Academy of Dermatology — Hair Loss Diagnosis and Treatment: https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/hair-loss/treatment/diagnosis-treat
- NIH / NCBI — Evaluation and Treatment of Hair Loss:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6691938/
Disclaimer: This blog is for informational and educational purposes only. If you’re experiencing persistent hair fall, consult a qualified dermatologist to identify the underlying cause and determine the most appropriate treatment for your condition.

