Where's the hair?
Hair Disorders
Nail Disorders
You Can't Work On That
That's (Dand)RUFF
100

The partial or complete loss of hair from where it typically grows:

Alopecia

100
Technical term for gray or white hair:

Canities

100

Dark purplish spots, typically due to a nail bed injury, and can be camouflaged by nail polish:

Bruised Nail Bed

100

Also known as Athlete's Foot, seen as red patches or scaling at the bottom of the feet:

Tinea Pedis

100

This is commonly mistaken for dry scalp:

Dandruff

200

The loss of terminal hair on the body and scalp:

Alopecia Universalis

200
The growth of terminal hair on a woman's body in areas that typically have vellus hair:

Hirsuties

200

Thin white nail plate, more flexible than usual:

Eggshell Nail

200

Highly contagious condition caused by mites:

Scabies

200

The technical term for dandruff:

Pityriasis

300

Hair loss characterized by terminal hair miniaturization and a shortened anagen phase:

Androgenic Alopecia

300

Technical term for split ends

Trichoptilosis

300

Also known as Trumpet Nail:

Pincer Nail

300

Inflammation or infection of the hair follicles:

Folliculitis

300

Regular use of this product is essential for controlling dandruff:

Anti-dandruff Shampoo

400

An autoimmune disorder that leads to round or irregularly shaped patches:

Alopecia Areata

400

The technical term for brittle hair:

Fragilitas Crinium

400

Damage to capillaries under the nail, giving the appearance of this under the nail plate:

Splinter Hemorrhage

400

Fungal scalp infection known as Ringworm of the Scalp:

Tinea Capitis

400

Dandruff is caused by a naturally occurring fungus called:

Malassezia

500

A topical medication applied to the scalp:

Minoxidil

500

The technical term for beaded hair:

Monilethrix

500

Whitish discolored spots on the nails, caused by minor injury to the nail matrix:

Leukonychia

500

Rapidly growing and contagious bacteria in the nail that can cause infection; yellow-green spot that advances to brown and black:

Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

500

A more severe case of dandruff; greasy or waxy scales mixed with sebum that stick to the scalp in crusts:

Pityriasis Steatoides