Showing posts with label hair loss Cause. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hair loss Cause. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Experiencing Male Pattern Baldness? Discover the "pattern" Secret in Men and Women Hair Loss!

You probably never thought male pattern baldness or balding patches would happen to you!

For the first time in your life you look in the mirror and notice your hairline is receding! If you are a woman, you might be experiencing patches of hair loss!

In my case I was experiencing both; an extreme receding hairline and a bald spot!

Maybe you never stopped to think why male pattern baldness looks the same for everyone who is losing hair. Of course, that's why it's known as male "pattern" baldness!

I never thought about it until I started searching for natural home remedies for hair loss for myself!

What Causes the Pattern?

First we need to understand what significantly contributes to hair loss in women and men.

It's excessive oil!

Natural home remedy hair specialists who have been in the field of restoring hair loss - with success - for 20 years, say that 99% of the time hair loss in both men and women usually comes from one thing. Excessive oil!

This oil is called sebum. When this oil gets clogged in your scalp it stops the hair follicle from growing. Eventually the oil will prevent the root from surfacing. The end result is a receding hairline and what we know as "hereditary male pattern baldness" and androgenetic alopecia.

Also experts know that hair on a man's head grows "straight out" in some areas and in other areas grows laying down. This direction of hair growth is what forms the hereditary pattern in men's hair. For women, it's quite different in terms of the direction their hair tends to grow.

However, for men, the round spot in the back of the head which usually loses hair is the area that usually grows straight out. The same goes for the receding hairline areas. These areas tend to easily attract the excessive oils that clog these hair follicles on the head.

The hair that normally sticks straight out is the hair that will fall out first.

For women, it is different because their hair does not grows straight out in those areas. However, they will experience hair loss in patches that relate to hormone and other problems. Although women can experience similar limited receding hairline loss.

So this is the reason that certain areas of the scalp experience the first hair loss.

In fact, I think that 99% of the time, hereditary baldness in men can really be stopped or significantly improved by simple natural home remedies for hair loss! The experts don't want you to believe that, or you wouldn't buy their expensive hair transplants and medications!

In fact, the experts will tell you that most men are genetically predisposed to male pattern baldness; and it's just an effect that hormones have on the hair.

What Does Male Pattern Baldness Tell You about Your Health?

Really, balding is not hereditary as much as a tendency toward balding. This is because health and lifestyle habits can cause hair loss along with other symptoms.

I didn't believe that before, until I used a natural home remedy for hair loss to restore my own hair and dignity! Otherwise I'd still be trying to hide my bald spot with bandannas and other "hiding" techniques.

When you look in the mirror and your hair looks dry, brittle, frizzy, limp, lifeless, flat or even jagged looking, it is trying to tell you something.

It doesn't mean that you won't function normally throughout the day. However, the human body's capable of functioning effectively at very low health levels.

Male pattern baldness and hair loss is actually a symptom of the health level of your body.

When you are healthy physically and emotionally, your hair will be shining and your skullcap will be pliant. A moist healthy scalp makes it easier for hair to breakthrough and live!

When you are physically unhealthy and if you're emotionally upset you can expect your hair to look limp and lifeless.

At this point, the hair is getting weak and the oils that are produced by stress sebaceous glands create the clogging oils on your scalp that lead to extreme hair loss.

What Really Contributes to Male Pattern Baldness?

Major change in your lifestyle will often produce symptoms to your hair and skin.

While it seems that stress promotes hair loss, actually research shows there is only an indirect connection.

The truth is that stress goes hand-in-hand with good health habits.

For example: what do you do when you're in a hurry? Think about it. You have to get to work on time so you don't fix your hair, you may not even wash it. Because you're worried about paying the mortgage, you drink more coffee and soda. You forget to eat breakfast and when you do eat, it has no nutritional value. You might end the day with a TV dinner that has no nutritional value to promote hair regrowth.

You can add to that, no exercise, not enough sleep, dirty environments, $.99 shampoo and conditioner (filled with chemicals, and many have never really been tested for safety, much less health), and more!

Yes, your hair will be one of the first signs that your body is experiencing some sort of distress. Your hair, scalp and skin will show signs of health deficiencies. Even medications will show signs.

That includes over-the-counter drugs and chemically treated hair products used by women that make the effects even more drastic.

When I was experiencing extreme hair loss, I tried a natural hair loss remedy first, instead of taking any drastic measures like hair transplants and medications with side effects. Anything that can be fixed naturally is always going to be your best choice of action!

When I stopped my receding hairline and completely restored a bald spot in back of my head, I did it with simple natural hair loss remedies. My grandfather wore a toupee and my father was already bald at 48 when he retired from the army. And at 44 I already had hair loss pictures with extreme hair loss.

By using natural home remedies for hair loss, it took me less than 12 weeks before I was experiencing significant improvements, which included hair regeneration. My closest friend was absolutely surprised when she saw the new baby hairs growing in my receding hairline! So was I!

I'm completely convinced that most hair loss sufferers can be helped with simple hair loss remedies!

Saturday, 16 February 2008

Understanding the Cause of Hair Loss Vitamin Deficiency

Until now the debate over hair loss vitamin deficiency has been raging. One side says that hair loss is not due to a lack of vitamins in the body. The other side says that losing your hair due to nutrient deficiency is very real. What is the truth about hair loss vitamin deficiency?

Hair Loss

It is a fact that even some people with balanced diets still experience hair loss. This is because hair loss is often caused by heredity and the action of hormones. Some individuals actually have genes that make them sensitive to the hormone DHT. It is this hormone that eventually shrinks the hair follicles and causes hair loss. This doesn't mean though that there is no truth behind hair loss vitamin deficiency. In a way, being deficient in some vitamins and minerals could contribute to hair loss in people of all shapes, colors and sizes.

Hair Loss Vitamin Deficiency

Just think about it, the hair is not an artificial attachment. It is very much a part of our bodies. Whatever we put inside our bodies will therefore either nourish or contribute to the diminished quality and quantity of our hair. It has been scientifically proven that eating meals that lack some vitamins and minerals can make you shed some hair strands.

People suspect that vitamin deficiency is caused by bad eating habits. Uncontrolled dieting, frequent fast food meals or not eating at all due to lack of time are only some of the modern conditions that can help promote hair loss vitamin deficiency.

Nutrients You Need

Eating a healthy and well-balanced diet would, naturally though, decrease the chances of suffering from hair loss. This would mean cutting down on fat, eating only lean meat and increasing your intake of vegetables, fruits and whole grains.

Other than this common sense tip, you should also remember to ensure that you have enough of some specific vitamins and minerals to prevent hair loss vitamin deficiency. One examples of these anti hair loss vitamins are the B complex vitamins specifically vitamin B6. This vitamin is necessary for promoting healthy blood cells which are needed to distribute nutrients to the entire body, including the hair. B complex vitamins can be found in beans, poultry, milk, cabbage, oatmeal, nuts and spinach.

Make sure that you have enough vitamin C, A, E and K, aside from the vitamin B-complex group. Other than vitamins, increase your intake of foods with magnesium and zinc too.

Because it is not always possible to get all these nutrients by food and diet alone, it is also advisable to take vitamin and mineral supplements.

Other Hair Loss Cases

You may have another cause for hair loss if you are taking the right supplements and eating balanced diet but still having hair loss. Consider looking into other factors. It is possible that if hair loss does not run in your family, then it could be caused by stress, restrictive hairstyles or an autoimmune disorder.

Genetic Hair Loss – Skull Expansion is the True Cause!

Hair loss affects up to 80% of men and 50% of women, and in most cases androgenetic alopecia is to blame. This article explains how Skull Expansion is the true cause of genetic hair loss and why the conventional reasons given to explain it are wrong!

There's no doubt that male hormones (androgens) somehow cause hair loss in those with the genetic predisposition towards it. Furthermore, dihydrotestosterone (DHT) is the androgen directly linked to this process.

However, genetics and male hormones do not fully explain the exact mechanism that will cause hair loss to start. That’s because they can’t answer the following questions:

Q1. Why do some people lose hair from the front (receding temples), the back (a bald patch), or both these regions of the scalp?

Q2. Why is it that hair can fall faster in one region of the scalp than it does in the other, and start at different times in a person's life? (E.g., about 20% of men start losing their hair at puberty but most don't start until they’re much older).

Q3. How can DHT be linked to both hair loss and hair growth? (DHT will, during puberty, stimulate hair to grow in other parts of the body).

These are all very relevant questions about the hair loss process. So, it’s important that complete and accurate answers are given before any theory can be acknowledged as the true underlying cause of androgenetic alopecia.

It now seems more likely that the actual mechanism that causes this type of hair loss is Skull Expansion. Here’s a very brief explanation of how this process causes genetic hair loss:

When you’re growing up into an adult, your skeleton obviously gets bigger and bigger. This, of course, includes the skull, which not only grows in size but also changes shape.

Once you reach adulthood, this process (called bone remodelling and resorption) then continues throughout life. For some, this simply involves maintenance of the bones (i.e., keeping them strong and healthy). But, for those who suffer hair loss, this process will cause the frontal and parietal bones of the skull to grow.

This is Skull Expansion, and is the direct cause of hair loss within the male pattern baldness (MPB) region of the scalp.

The genetic link to male pattern baldness is due to the skull shape you inherit. Different skull shapes will have different growth potential (this simply means that the predisposition towards Skull Expansion will vary). The extent to which you lose hair is directly related to the extent to which your skull will expand. Obviously this means that greater Skull Expansion will cause more hair loss.

Only Skull Expansion can provide answers to all of those earlier questions:

A1. Hair loss at the front is caused by Skull Expansion of the frontal bone. A bald patch at the back is caused by Skull Expansion of the parietal bones. And hair loss at the front and back of the scalp simultaneously, is caused by Skull Expansion of both frontal and parietal bones.

A2. The different rates of hair loss between the front and back of the scalp depend upon the skull shape you inherit and its growth potential. That’s why your hair loss could start as early as puberty or much later on in life.

A3. DHT can stimulate hair growth, but it also encourages bone growth. Androgens like DHT are steroid hormones which have an anabolic effect on bone formation (i.e., they make it grow!) DHT causes Skull Expansion, which then causes hair loss to start.

So, now you know that the true cause of genetic hair loss is Skull Expansion. And, should you be in any doubt, why not simply contact a hair specialist, ask those questions, and see what answers you get!