| We must distinguish between hair
loss and hair breakage. When a hair falls
out it does so with the root, the little bulb at the end of
the hair. Sliding your fingers down the fallen hair you can
feel the little bulb at the end. This tells you that your
hair has really fallen out and not just broken off.
The person who is in the best
position to know if a woman's hair is getting
thinner after age 40 is her hair stylist. Especially a hair
stylist that has had the same clientele for many years.
I have had female clients of
all ages for many years in different countries
and I have never observed that their hair becomes thinner
at a certain age. Nor have I noticed that 50% of my clients
suffer from hair loss. (This is the figure one magazine quoted).
Rarely do I observe hair loss with my clients. As a matter
of fact after many years in the business I can count on one
hand women whose hair has thinned.
You may not be aware
that it is normal to lose up to 100 hair a day. Every cell
in your body constantly renews itself including your hair.
Each follicle produces hair for a specific period of time,
which varies from 2 to 4 years. During the life of the follicle
new hair is formed in the bulb and this additional growth
pushes the older part of the hair further and further away
from the papilla. It has a short resting period before again
forming a new hair growth.
Hair looks and feels thinner
when there is less density, less hair on your head . It reaches
this stage when the hair that has fallen out has not been
replaced by new hair. Why does this happen?
One reason for this might
be female pattern baldness (androgenetic alopecia or male
pattern baldness - alopecia areata in men) where hair does
not get replaced and the follicle atrophies. As I mentioned
earlier very few women suffer from this despite what you read
in magazines. Another cause of thinning hair may be an overactive
or underactive thyroid, which can be controlled with medication.
Hair loss that
temporarily results in thinning hair.
You can have significant hair
loss after giving birth, surgery, crash dieting,
severe infection or high fever. This type of hair loss is
called telogen effluvium. As soon as your body returns to
normal or is healed your hair growth will also return to normal
without treatment.
You can also experience
hair loss when there is a problem with your health.
If you lose more than the normal amount of hair every day
it may be a symptom that something is wrong. Because our hair
is not really essential for life, any threat or serious change
in our state of health may be reflected in some corresponding
change in our hair.
Another unusual type
of sudden hair loss is called "alopecia areata"
which is an autoimmune form of hair loss and is genetic. Round,
smooth patches form on the scalp quite quickly where hair
has fallen out. Hair sometimes grows back on its own. It can
be treated successfully over several months. A more severe
form is called alopecia totalis where all the hair is lost
but eventually will grow back. |