Hair loss is one of the most common—and least discussed—medical concerns affecting people today. Whether triggered by stress, hormones, illness, or medication, the experience can feel isolating and confusing without the right information.
Dr. Aamna Adel, MBBS MRCP, brings both clinical expertise and actual personal experience to the subject. Diagnosed with lupus after a sudden episode of painful hair loss, she found herself on the other side of the patient experience, grappling with limited treatment options and a lack of accessible guidance. That gap is what led her to use her platform to discuss scalp health and ultimately create Rhute, a scalp care brand built on clinically tested, science-driven formulas.
Her approach comes down to a simple conviction: The basics, done consistently, will outperform any single procedure. Here, she speaks with The Newsette about the myths we need to let go of, what’s actually driving today’s rise in hair loss, and where to put your money if you’re ready to take things further.
What drew you specifically to scalp and hair within dermatology?
When I first started derm, I wanted to be a mole surgeon—focusing on skin cancer surgery, the more technically advanced, hands-on side. What changed everything was a personal experience. Before I was diagnosed with lupus, I had a couple of days where my scalp felt really tender. Then I woke up one morning and found I’d lost huge chunks of hair. I went through biopsies and got diagnosed. But being on the other side of that experience really triggered something in me.
Do you think the apparent rise in people experiencing or seeking help for hair loss is real?
The number of people seeking help does seem to have increased. COVID played a big role; we definitely saw a link between post-viral illness and hair loss. And it wasn’t just people who got COVID—those who were severely stressed by lockdown triggered a stress response with the same effect. That post-viral, stress-related connection is something I saw clearly in clinic.
What about GLP-1s?
GLP-1s are really common now, and the volume of people I’m seeing with hair thinning from them is striking—it seems to affect almost every single person I know who is on one. But it’s always that balance, because those same people often have better blood sugar control and better health. Hair becomes the lower priority when you’re weighing it against other health concerns.
The honest answer is that we don’t actually know yet whether the medication itself (or the weight loss) is causing the hair loss. We’d need to see what happens when people come off it—and even then, it’s six to nine months before you’d know whether the hair is going to return.
What are some of the biggest hair and scalp myths you want to bust?
A few I hear constantly:
“Hair training" works. The idea that washing less will regulate oil simply doesn’t hold up—you can’t regulate oil production by washing something less. For most people, they should be washing far more than they think.
All heat is bad. Blow drying your hair (with heat protectant) is often better than letting it air dry for hours. A wet scalp is how you get yeast overgrowth and fungal issues. Hair is also far more fragile when wet, so sleeping on wet hair causes breakage.
Sun damage only affects your skin. UV is actually a bigger damager of hair than bleach—breaking it down every single day. When hair feels dry and brittle in summer, or color lightens from sun exposure, that’s damage. A UV-protective spray in summer is something I’d always recommend.
For someone with a limited budget who is experiencing hair loss, what products would you prioritize?
Start with a good shampoo matched to your scalp type—it’s not one size fits all. If you have a greasy scalp, look for oil-regulating ingredients like salicylic acid or niacinamide. If you have a dry scalp, look for hydrating ones. Conditioner is not optional—everyone should use it.
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