Eight-year-old's horror after her "too tight" holiday braids caused alopecia
Last updated at 18:52pm on 01.11.07
Before: Jodie Holdsworth last year before she had the braids
So the eight-year-old paid a local stylist to braid her hair.
Returning home from the resort of Faliraki in Rhodes, she delightedly showed off her new look to friends in Pontefract, West Yorkshire.
Within days, however, her delight turned to misery when her shoulder-length brown hair started coming away from her scalp in large clumps.
One year on, Jodie is completely bald after the stress of losing her hair caused her to develop alopecia, which also made her eyelashes and eyebrows fall out.
Doctors blame the loss on the braids being wound too tight and killing the hair follicles.
Jodie's mother, Lisa Smalley, 29, said yesterday: 'She had seen other children having their hair braided so we paid £30 to have it done at a roadside stall.
"It took the lady in charge about half an hour.
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Holiday hairdo: Jodie's braids were too tight and her hair began to fall out
"Jodie thought it looked great and couldn't wait to get back to school to show everyone. At the time she said it felt a bit tight but we thought no more about it and came home.
"She was due to have her school photograph taken so we thought it better to remove the braids.
"But when we tried to loosen them they started coming away from her scalp.
"I took Jodie to a friend's house to remove the rest and we thought she would look all right.
"But when we came home and went for a shower her hair literally just came sliding off her scalp. We were all in shock.'
Miss Smalley, who also has a four-year-old son, Joshua, with partner Christopher Holdsworth, 40, took Jodie to Pontefract General Infirmary where doctors diagnosed severe alopecia. By January, all her hair had gone.
Miss Smalley said: "According to the doctors, the braiding played a big part in her losing her hair. They can't say if it will ever grow back."
The youngster, who has been refused funding for a £1,000 "real wig" on the NHS, applies a solution to her scalp each week to encourage her hair follicles to grow.
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Jodie's hair started to fall out when the braids she had put in on holiday in Greece had to be removed for her school photograph. She then developed alopecia due to the stress.
She has had to put up with so many cruel comments about her appearance that she has been nominated for a Champion Children award because of her courage.
Miss Smalley said: "She says, 'I wish I'd never had it done mummy' but we take each day as it comes.
"The trauma she has been through is immense but she has coped really well."
In August, the British Journal of Dermatology warned that hairstyles such as corn rows, braids and hair extensions could damage hair and cause bald patches.
Reader views (3)
I believe that tight braids can lead to thinning of hair and maybe pulling out of some follicles, but if they braids where so tight they lead to this girls baldness, how did she not notice i.e excruciating pain. And the eyebrows and eyelashes aswell? all supposedly causing by this hair braiding? I think not. Perhaps she has some predispositon to this type of hair loss. The doctors suggestion to me is a manifestation of his/her uncertainity in the unknown: foreign customs
- Exactly Shane, Londonium, 13/07/2009 02:08
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Poor kid.
- Shane, sad, 04/07/2008 05:12
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The so called experts always blame this type of alopecia on stress because the truth is that they are just as clueless as the rest of us as to what REALLY causes this condition, and of course how to treat or cure it. I do believe that braiding the hair in this fashion can cause thinning and areas of hair loss, but eyebrows and lashes falling out too; I don't think so. What about all the other autoimmune diseases of which there are many. Are all these casued by stress too?
- Rich, Southampton, 05/11/2007 13:46
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