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Common Hair Loss Causes in Women
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Common Hair Loss Causes in Women
Hair is a great ornament of a woman. Her self-image and identity tangled in her hair. Poets always use hair phrases to express beauty of women. The most important thing a female can have, next to talent is her beautiful hair. It is a great extension of women's beauty, vigor and lifestyle.
However hair loss is a common concern in women and it is generally caused by temporary health problems.
Androgenic alopecia is an inherited form of losing hair. Whilst it is most prevalent in men, a small percent of women are also genetically predisposed to it.
Hormonal changes - some women's head becomes thinner during the menopause as a result of hormonal changes.
Pregnancy requires the body to redistribute resources between mother and child; as a result hair thinning can occur during pregnancy as a consequence of the body's metabolic imbalance. For the same reason many pregnant women also face a range of other problems, for example, calcium deficiency. As a rule, hair shedding ceases one or two months after delivery.
Stress is the most common cause of thinning hair in women. It is often difficult to diagnose stress related hair loss, as the first signs of hair loss can become evident months after its cause.
Physical and emotional exhaustion are always reflected in the body's condition. The consequences of stress can bring loss in hair, brittle nails and skin problems.
Diet and starvation - some women periodically keep radical diets, particularly when aiming to lose weight quickly. The malnutrition caused by extreme dieting can have a strong negative influence on hair growth. Those engaging in radical dieting can experience a number of unforeseen consequences, as with stress consequences can includes, brittle nails and skin problems in addition to hair losing.
Chemotherapy - pharmaceutical treatment of cancer often results in full hair loss. It occurs because the medicines used during cancer treatment kill rapidly growing cancer cells that are beyond the patient's control. However, the drugs also affect other rapidly growing cells such as hair cells, thus causing loss of hair.
The cancer treatment process then results in a pause in hair growth. Upon finishing treatment hairs begin to grow again, but can often break as they come up through the skin of the head.
New hairs can differ from the original hairs because for a while they will remain under the effect of the medication.
For more details please visit lokshair
However hair loss is a common concern in women and it is generally caused by temporary health problems.
Androgenic alopecia is an inherited form of losing hair. Whilst it is most prevalent in men, a small percent of women are also genetically predisposed to it.
Hormonal changes - some women's head becomes thinner during the menopause as a result of hormonal changes.
Pregnancy requires the body to redistribute resources between mother and child; as a result hair thinning can occur during pregnancy as a consequence of the body's metabolic imbalance. For the same reason many pregnant women also face a range of other problems, for example, calcium deficiency. As a rule, hair shedding ceases one or two months after delivery.
Stress is the most common cause of thinning hair in women. It is often difficult to diagnose stress related hair loss, as the first signs of hair loss can become evident months after its cause.
Physical and emotional exhaustion are always reflected in the body's condition. The consequences of stress can bring loss in hair, brittle nails and skin problems.
Diet and starvation - some women periodically keep radical diets, particularly when aiming to lose weight quickly. The malnutrition caused by extreme dieting can have a strong negative influence on hair growth. Those engaging in radical dieting can experience a number of unforeseen consequences, as with stress consequences can includes, brittle nails and skin problems in addition to hair losing.
Chemotherapy - pharmaceutical treatment of cancer often results in full hair loss. It occurs because the medicines used during cancer treatment kill rapidly growing cancer cells that are beyond the patient's control. However, the drugs also affect other rapidly growing cells such as hair cells, thus causing loss of hair.
The cancer treatment process then results in a pause in hair growth. Upon finishing treatment hairs begin to grow again, but can often break as they come up through the skin of the head.
New hairs can differ from the original hairs because for a while they will remain under the effect of the medication.
For more details please visit lokshair
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