DHT also influences prostate tissue

What Is DHT? The Hormone Behind Hair Loss and Prostate Ageing Explained

• 9 minute read

Why Does One Hormone Affect Both Hair Loss and the Prostate?

If you’ve researched male pattern hair loss, you’ve almost certainly come across the term DHT.

It is often described as the hormone responsible for thinning hair. However, DHT influences far more than the scalp.

Dihydrotestosterone (DHT) also plays an important role in prostate biology, making it one of the most significant hormones involved in male ageing.

Understanding how DHT works helps explain why hair follicles gradually become smaller in genetically susceptible individuals while prostate tissue often changes with age.

Although these processes affect different parts of the body, they are linked by the same biological signalling pathways.

What Is DHT?

DHT, or dihydrotestosterone, is a naturally occurring androgen hormone produced from testosterone.

This conversion happens through an enzyme called 5-alpha reductase, which is present in several tissues throughout the body, including:

  • Hair follicles
  • The scalp
  • The prostate
  • Skin
  • Liver

While testosterone remains the body’s principal male sex hormone, DHT is considerably more biologically active.

It binds more strongly to androgen receptors, producing more powerful effects on certain tissues.

During puberty, DHT is essential for normal male development.

Throughout adult life, however, its influence continues, particularly within the scalp and prostate.

How Is DHT Produced?

Every day, the body converts a proportion of circulating testosterone into DHT.

This is a completely normal biological process.

The enzyme 5-alpha reductase removes a double bond from testosterone, creating DHT.

Although this may sound like a minor chemical alteration, it significantly changes how strongly the hormone interacts with cells.

Once formed, DHT binds to androgen receptors inside target tissues.

This activates specific genes that regulate growth, development and cellular activity.

The effect depends entirely on which tissue the hormone is acting upon.

Diagram explaining the conversion of testosterone to DHT and its effects.

Why Does DHT Cause Hair Loss?

DHT is the most common biological cause of androgenetic alopecia, more commonly known as male pattern hair loss.

Importantly, DHT does not damage healthy hair.

Instead, genetically susceptible hair follicles become increasingly sensitive to its effects.

Hair Follicle Miniaturisation

Each hair follicle repeatedly cycles through three phases:

  • Anagen – active growth
  • Catagen – transition
  • Telogen – resting before shedding

When follicles become increasingly sensitive to DHT, several biological changes occur.

The anagen (growth) phase gradually becomes shorter.

Each new hair grows for less time than the previous cycle.

At the same time, the follicle itself becomes progressively smaller.

Illustration of the hair growth cycle: anagen, catagen, telogen, new growth.

This process is known as follicular miniaturisation.

Over many years, thick terminal hairs are gradually replaced by finer, shorter hairs until some follicles eventually produce little or no visible hair.

This explains why male pattern hair loss usually develops gradually rather than suddenly.

Illustration showing hair follicle miniaturization stages.

Why Doesn’t Everyone Lose Their Hair?

This is one of the biggest misconceptions surrounding DHT.

Many people assume hair loss is caused by having too much DHT.

In reality, it is often follicle sensitivity that matters most.

Two men may have similar DHT levels but experience completely different hair outcomes because their hair follicles respond differently to the hormone.

Genetics largely determine this sensitivity.

This is why male pattern hair loss frequently runs in families.

How Does DHT Affect the Prostate?

The prostate is another tissue that responds strongly to DHT.

Throughout adult life, DHT helps regulate normal prostate function.

However, lifelong exposure to androgen signalling may also influence how prostate tissue changes as men age.

This is one reason benign prostate enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia or BPH) becomes increasingly common later in life.

It is important to understand that benign prostate enlargement is not the same as prostate cancer.

Although both involve the prostate, they are different biological conditions with different underlying mechanisms.

Why Is DHT Linked to Both Hair Loss and Prostate Ageing?

The answer lies in tissue-specific biology.

Although DHT is the same hormone, different tissues respond differently to its presence.

Hair follicles respond by gradually reducing in size in genetically susceptible individuals.

Prostate tissue responds through different cellular pathways that influence growth and tissue maintenance.

The hormone itself is not inherently harmful.

Its effects depend on the biology of the tissue it is acting upon.

Diagram explaining DHT's effects on hair follicles, prostate, and biological outcomes.

Can DHT Levels Be Measured?

DHT can be measured through laboratory testing.

However, circulating blood levels do not always reflect what is happening inside individual tissues.

For hair loss in particular, follicle sensitivity often plays a greater role than hormone concentration alone.

This helps explain why laboratory hormone levels may appear normal despite progressive male pattern hair loss.

Common Misconceptions About DHT

“DHT Is a Bad Hormone”

False.

DHT plays essential roles in normal male development and adult physiology.

Problems arise when genetically susceptible tissues respond differently over time.

“Only Older Men Are Affected”

Hair follicle sensitivity to DHT can begin much earlier, which is why some men notice thinning hair in their twenties or thirties.

Age-related prostate changes generally become more common later in life.

“Stopping Hair Loss Is Only About Blocking DHT”

Hair follicle biology is considerably more complex.

Inflammation, oxidative stress, scalp circulation, nutritional status and the duration of the anagen phase all contribute to maintaining healthy follicles.

A comprehensive approach considers the entire follicular environment rather than a single pathway.

Supporting Hair Follicle and Prostate Health

Healthy ageing involves supporting multiple biological systems simultaneously.

For hair follicles, this includes maintaining a healthy scalp environment, supporting the anagen phase, managing inflammation, optimising scalp circulation and ensuring adequate nutritional support.

For prostate wellbeing, healthy ageing involves hormonal balance, antioxidant protection, nutritional status and appropriate medical guidance where required.

Because these systems are interconnected, supporting overall physiological health may contribute to maintaining normal tissue function over time.

Urban Retreat’s Laboratory-Developed Supportive Systems

Urban Retreat recognises that DHT influences multiple aspects of male biology.

Rather than focusing on isolated ingredients, our laboratory-developed formulations are created to support the biological environments in which healthy tissues function.

Capill-Hair System

The Urban Retreat Capill-Hair collection is laboratory-developed to support healthy hair follicles through a multi-pathway approach that includes scalp optimisation, support for the hair growth cycle, management of inflammation, targeted nutritional support and consideration of DHT as the most common biological cause of hair loss.

UR Daily P-Ease

UR Daily P-Ease is a laboratory-developed nutritional formulation developed to support prostate wellbeing through carefully selected plant sterols, polyphenols, vitamins and minerals that contribute to healthy ageing and normal cellular function.

Both systems recognise that complex biological processes require comprehensive nutritional and topical support rather than relying on a single mechanism.

Understanding DHT Means Understanding Male Ageing

DHT is neither good nor bad.

It is an essential hormone with important biological functions throughout life.

However, because different tissues respond differently to androgen signalling, DHT is closely associated with two of the most common age-related concerns affecting men: hair loss and prostate changes.

Understanding these mechanisms helps explain why maintaining healthy follicles and supporting prostate wellbeing requires an appreciation of biology rather than simple assumptions.

Knowledge provides the foundation for informed decisions, appropriate professional guidance and a more comprehensive approach to healthy ageing.

Important Notice

UR Daily P-Ease and Urban Retreat’s Capill-Hair formulations are intended to support wellbeing and healthy biological function. They are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Food supplements should not be used as a substitute for a varied, balanced diet and healthy lifestyle.


Frequently Asked Questions About DHT

What is DHT?

DHT (dihydrotestosterone) is a naturally occurring androgen hormone produced when testosterone is converted by an enzyme called 5-alpha reductase. Although DHT is essential for normal male development, it continues to influence tissues such as the hair follicles and prostate throughout adult life.

Is DHT the same as testosterone?

No. Testosterone and DHT are closely related but are different hormones.

DHT is produced from testosterone and binds more strongly to androgen receptors. This means it has a greater biological effect in certain tissues, including the scalp and prostate.

Why does DHT cause hair loss?

DHT is the most common biological cause of male pattern hair loss (androgenetic alopecia).

In genetically susceptible individuals, hair follicles become increasingly sensitive to DHT. Over time, this shortens the anagen (growth) phase of the hair cycle and causes follicles to gradually become smaller, a process known as follicular miniaturisation. As follicles shrink, hairs become progressively finer and shorter until some follicles eventually produce little or no visible hair.

Does DHT affect everyone in the same way?

No.

The effects of DHT vary from person to person because genetics play a significant role in determining how sensitive hair follicles and other tissues are to androgen signalling.

Two people with similar DHT levels may experience very different outcomes depending on their individual biology.

Why is DHT linked to prostate ageing?

The prostate contains androgen receptors that respond to DHT throughout life.

As men age, ongoing exposure to DHT contributes to normal prostate function but may also influence age-related changes within prostate tissue. This is one reason benign prostate enlargement becomes increasingly common with advancing age.

Is an enlarged prostate the same as prostate cancer?

No.

Benign prostate enlargement (benign prostatic hyperplasia or BPH) is a non-cancerous condition that commonly develops with age.

Although both benign enlargement and prostate cancer affect the prostate, they are different biological conditions with different underlying mechanisms. Any persistent urinary symptoms or concerns should always be discussed with a healthcare professional.

What is 5-alpha reductase?

5-alpha reductase is an enzyme that converts testosterone into DHT.

It is found in several tissues throughout the body, including the scalp, hair follicles, skin and prostate, where it helps regulate normal hormonal activity.

What is follicular miniaturisation?

Follicular miniaturisation is the gradual shrinking of hair follicles over multiple hair growth cycles.

As follicles become smaller, they produce increasingly finer, shorter hairs until visible hair growth may eventually stop in affected areas.

This process is the hallmark of male pattern hair loss.

Can DHT levels be measured?

Yes.

DHT can be measured using laboratory testing.

However, circulating DHT levels do not always reflect what is happening within individual tissues. In male pattern hair loss, follicle sensitivity to DHT is often more important than the amount of hormone circulating in the bloodstream.

Does everyone with high DHT lose their hair?

Not necessarily.

Hair loss is influenced by both hormone activity and genetic sensitivity.

Many men with normal or even relatively high DHT levels retain a full head of hair because their follicles are less sensitive to androgen signalling.

Can women be affected by DHT?

Yes.

Women naturally produce much lower levels of DHT than men, but the hormone still plays a role in female biology.

In some women, increased androgen activity may contribute to certain forms of hair thinning, although female hair loss often involves multiple hormonal and biological factors.

Why is understanding DHT important?

DHT influences several biological processes throughout the body.

Understanding how it affects hair follicles and prostate tissue helps explain why these common age-related changes occur and why maintaining healthy hair and prostate function often requires a comprehensive approach that considers hormones, genetics, inflammation, oxidative stress and overall wellbeing rather than focusing on a single factor.

How does Urban Retreat approach DHT-related concerns?

Urban Retreat recognises that DHT is one part of a much wider biological picture.

Our laboratory-developed haircare and wellbeing formulations are created to support the biological environments in which healthy hair follicles and prostate tissue function. Rather than focusing on a single pathway, our systems consider factors such as follicle biology, scalp optimisation, nutritional support, healthy ageing and long-term tissue health.

Is DHT a ‘bad’ hormone?

No.

DHT is an essential hormone with important functions throughout life, particularly during male development.

Its effects depend on the tissue involved. While DHT is associated with male pattern hair loss and age-related prostate changes in susceptible individuals, it also plays important roles in normal physiology. Understanding its biological function is more helpful than viewing it as either ‘good’ or ‘bad’.

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