Health & Fitness PROMISING PROTOCOL I ON THE COVER Gail Zimmerman Arts Editor A Kim Higginbottom of Farmington Hills undergoes low level laser therapy, or LLLT, at Renew Hair & Skin Center in Bingham Farms. ctress Jamie Lee Curtis knew what she was talking about when she said: "People get real comfortable with their features. Nobody gets comfortable with their hair. Hair trauma. It's the universal thing." For individuals experiencing hair loss — both men and women — that trauma of looking in the mirror every morning is multiplied tenfold. There just are no good hair days. Just ask Suzie Meklir and Robin Pluto. Meklir, 46, of Bloomfield Township, and Pluto, 50, of Bloomfield Hills, are best friends and co-founders of Renew Hair & Skin Center in Bingham Farms. They opened their business in March 2010 — and have since tripled their space — after Meklir's own harrowing experience with hair loss. 'About eight years ago, I began to experience constant shed- ding of my hair, with huge clumps in the shower and in the bath- room after blowouts," explains Meklir, who is married with two daughters and a member of Temple Israel in West Bloomfield. "It was everywhere — on the table at restaurants and all over me — to the point strangers would constantly be picking hair off my clothing. I became hair obsessed — and depressed. "I'm a very social person, but the hair loss started affecting me when I'd go out. I didn't feel good about myself, and I wore a baseball cap whenever I could." Pluto, also the mother of two daughters and engaged to be married in May, was right beside Meklir as the two women searched for a solution to Meklir's increasingly thinning hair. "Suzie had tried every product out there that promised hair volume and hair growth — including fermented horse urine — she was that desperate says Pluto, a member of Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield who previously worked in finance and real estate. Oft-prescribed topical solutions like minoxidil (Rogaine) and Propecia were out of the question because Meklir, who has a background in nutrition counseling, has a heart murmur and was afraid of the drugs and their well-documented side effects. She also didn't relish being beholden to a product she would have to use every day for the rest of her life. Meklir is the daughter of a pharmacist, and Pluto the daughter of a physician — "so we have medical treatment in our blood," says Pluto. The friends embarked on a global search to find a treatment to stem Meklir's hair loss and restore her previously thick mane of healthy hair. Then, about three years ago, they came upon a treatment that has been popular in Europe for more than two decades and recently has been touted by a number of medical profes- sionals and in the media —a segment recently aired on ABC's The Doctors as the newest hope for hair loss: low level laser therapy, or LLLT. — Renewe Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) offers new hope for hair loss. 26 January 27 2011 ou Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow According to the American Hair Loss Council, it is normal for people to shed 50 to 100 hairs a day. About 90 percent of hair on the scalp grows continually while the other 10 percent is in a rest- ing phase that lasts two to three months. At the end of the resting stage, this hair is shed and then replaced by a new hair from the same follicle. The growing cycle starts again. Scalp hair grows about one-half inch per month. But, as estimated by the American Hair Loss Association, by age 35, two-thirds of American men will experience some degree of appreciable hair loss. By age 50, approximately 85 percent have significantly thinning hair. Furthermore, says the AHLA, "hair loss is mistakenly thought to be a strictly male disease when women actually make up 40