"My ponytail feels thinner."
Reduced volume at the root, a smaller pony circumference, or visibly more scalp at the part line.
↗Shedding, widening parts and a softer hairline are common — and almost always treatable. Our hair-and-scalp pathway begins with trichoscopy and a written diagnosis, then routes to evidence-led restoration: plasmatherapy, mesotherapy and clinical follow-up.
Hair loss is a measurable change in density, diameter or growth phase — most often a slow shift you notice in the mirror before anyone else does. It can be hormonal, nutritional, post-illness or stress-driven, and the right treatment depends on the cause.
At Beauté Concept, we treat hair loss the way we treat any clinical concern: with diagnostics first, a written report, and a course of evidence-led therapy delivered by a trichologist. No mass-market shampoos, no guesswork.
"The earlier we read the scalp, the smaller the intervention. Most patients we see are not bald — they are losing density, and density is what we can recover."
If two or more of these sound familiar, a 30-minute trichoscopy will tell us exactly what's happening — and whether it needs intervention.
Reduced volume at the root, a smaller pony circumference, or visibly more scalp at the part line.
↗Persistent shedding above the typical 50–100 strands per day, often in the months after stress or illness.
↗Receding temples, a wider middle part, or a less defined frontal contour — a slow shift over 6–18 months.
↗Post-partum telogen effluvium — heavy shedding around month four, usually self-limiting but worth measuring.
↗Hair that breaks easily, lacks shine, or grows back finer than it used to — a sign of weakened follicles.
↗Diffuse thinning across the crown or hairline that's visible in bright light or photos — usually androgenic.
↗Hair loss is rarely one thing. The right diagnosis sets the right course — and the difference between supportive care and medical treatment.
Every hair-loss visit at Beauté Concept opens with a 30-minute trichology consultation led by Dr. Gayane Vardanyan. You leave the first appointment with a written report and, if needed, a tailored protocol — never with a prescription before a diagnosis.
Most courses combine an in-clinic protocol with a short topical and nutritional plan. Sessions are spaced and outcomes are re-measured at the end of every cycle.
Your own platelet-rich plasma, prepared in clinic and re-injected into the scalp to reawaken the follicle. The course is doctor-led, measurable on trichoscopy, and the most evidence-supported pathway we offer for androgenic and post-partum loss.
A vitamin, peptide and amino-acid infusion delivered into the scalp to nourish the follicle. Pairs well with plasmatherapy, often used between PRP cycles.
Advanced · New-genCell-signalling exosomes delivered topically after micro-needling — a newer protocol with promising data on miniaturization and shaft diameter.
Foundational · At homeA short, prescribed at-home routine — minoxidil where indicated, scalp serums, and a nutritional review. Simple. No clutter, no shopping list of unproven products.
Diagnostic · Follow-upThe same Canfield D-200 reading we ran at intake, repeated at the end of each course — so progress is measured, not estimated.
Hair concerns at our Tumanyan branch are led by a trichologist and supported by three injection-trained cosmetologists.
Trichology, scalp diagnostics and plasmatherapy. Reads every Canfield D-200 trichoscopy in-house.
EN · RU · HYMesotherapy, scalp injection protocols and density-support cycles for women.
RU · HYPRP and biorevitalization for the scalp; co-leads post-partum recovery courses.
EN · RU · HYTopical & nutritional protocols, exosome treatments, and the at-home plan that pairs every course.
EN · RUOur hair-and-scalp pathway is fully delivered at the Tumanyan branch — the trichology suite, the Canfield D-200 imaging room, and the plasmatherapy theatre are all on one floor.
A 30-minute trichoscopy and a written report — the only way we start a hair-loss course. If a treatment is right for you, we'll plan it. If it isn't, we'll tell you that, too.