Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow: What You Can Do About Hair Loss
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TriVita’s Weekly Wellness Report By Brazos Minshew, TriVita’s Chief Science Officer Join us on a journey to physical, emotional and spiritual health. Each Week TriVita’s Weekly Wellness Report brings you essential health and wellness information designed to help you reach your health goals. Brazos Minshew, TriVita’s Chief Science Officer, combines an extensive background in medical science, naturapathy, and alternative treatments to create smart lifestyle and nutritional solutions. |
Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow: What You Can Do About Hair Loss“It’s so frustrating I just want to pull my hair out!” Stress, including frustration, anxiety, depression, anger and any other end-point of emotional or psychological distress can literally cause hair loss. Are there other causes of hair loss? What are the different types of hair loss? Most important: What can someone do for hair loss? Types of hair lossAlopecia is the medical name for any type of hair loss. This condition can be divided into three subtypes:
With pattern baldness and scarring types of alopecia the hair follicle is lost. With non-scarring alopecia the hair follicle remains intact; the hair simply falls out. In scarring and pattern baldness the hair will not return. In non-scarring alopecia there is a chance for hair regrowth. Scarring alopeciaCertain diseases cause scarring alopecia. These can be related to severe infections (especially fungal infections) or life-threatening autoimmune disorders. An autoimmune disorder is an illness where your body loses the ability to tell healthy cells from sick cells; so, it attacks all cells of a certain type. In the condition lupus erythematosus, the immune system attacks collagen and connective tissue. This causes scars where the immune system killed the cells. When lupus affects the scalp, the immune system kills the hair follicle. Only a scar remains where the follicle used to live. That is why this type of hair loss is called “scarring” alopecia. Non-scarring alopeciaBy far the most common type of hair loss or thinning is non-scarring alopecia. With this type of hair loss, hair typically “sheds” and thins rather evenly when you brush or wash it. Hair may also fall out in certain spots, but not others. Because the hair follicle is still alive it is possible for the hair to return and regrow with time. It is vitally important to find the reason why hair begins to fall out and address this cause. Otherwise, hair will not return or, if it does, it will quickly fall out again. Non-scarring alopecia is often an autoimmune reaction as well. A major difference between scarring and non-scarring alopecia is that scarring hair loss is associated with an autoimmune disease; non-scarring is often associated with an autoimmune reaction, not a disease. For instance, hair loss is often experienced during pregnancy or following childbirth. The stress of birth temporarily overtaxes the immune system. The overwhelmed immune system “loses its way” for a while and attacks both healthy and unhealthy tissues alike. This type of hair loss occurs with any significant strain:
Often, people with alopecia suffer from stresses in one or more of these categories. What to do…With non-scarring alopecia we must, first and foremost, determine the stresses triggering hair loss. Then, we need to take steps to insulate and isolate ourselves from these stresses.
Your hair is more than a crown of beauty; it is a window on how well your body deals with stress. Learn to listen to this subtle sign of health: beautiful hair!
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Please note that Weekly Wellness Report topics will be chosen at the discretion of Brazos Minshew and based on general relevance. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA, and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. |
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