Your hair has a way of telling you if your body is in balance. If you are healthy - physically as well as
emotionally - your hair will be radiant and shining and your scalp pliant and
moist.
If you are not well physically, or if you are upset emotionally,
your hair becomes dull and lifeless - it will begin to fall out, and your hair
will become waxy with the overproduction of your traumatised sebaceous glands.
If your hair is thinning or you are
experiencing baldness and it seems abnormal either because you are young or
female, it is more than likely that stress is the culprit of hair loss. Your hair is one of the first places your
body shows distress. Illness, medication and imbalances in nutrition all show
up in you hair and scalp.
Usually, it is not mild job or life stress
that triggers hair loss, more likely it is extremely serious stress to the body
that causes hair to stop growing and fall out. These types of stress can be
initiated by some types of medications, diabetes, thyroid disorders and even
extreme emotional stress, but also can be caused by commonplace life events
like childbirth, miscarriage and surgery.
Any major change in our lives can be reflected in the condition of
our hair, scalp and skin. We reflect our
health and well-being in the condition of our hair and scalp.
But how does stress actually effect hair loss? Well hair grows in
repeating cycles. The active growth phase lasts around two years and is
followed by a resting phase that spans three months, after which the hair falls
from the scalp. Normally, every strand of hair in your head is at a different
point in this cycle, so the shedding is barely noticeable: a few strands in the
shower drain, some more on your brush, a hair or two on your pillow. A normal
head sheds at most 100 strands of hair a day.
However, when the body undergoes extreme stress, as much as 70
percent of your hair can prematurely enter the resting phase. Three months
later, these hairs begin to fall out, causing noticeable hair loss.
The person will not become completely bald and the thinning will be
fairly unnoticeable. However, it is this three month delay and the fact that
the trigger seems so unrelated that causes confusion on the part of the patient
concerned about hair loss.
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