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[H14]Hair Loss And Menopause
by Lachlan Walker, Lac
Substances such as alcohol, caffeine, sugar and nicotine can deplete the body of nutrients and raise adrenal levels, which will cause a chain reaction of producing more androgen and causing hair loss. High levels of saturated fat and cholesterol rich foods are also linked to increased DHT levels and their consumption should be limited. Additionally, common table salt has been linked to hair loss. And the average diet provides the recommended amount of sodium intake; therefore, salt should never be added to food. However, when using salt for seasoning during cooking, be sure to use salt with Iodine being that it is a nutrient that is vital to hair growth as well, unless you are a regular consumer of seafood, which contains high levels of Iodine.

Toxemia can cause a great deal of dysfunction in the body's systems, including hair-loss related illnesses such as eczema, psoriasis, seborrhea and possibly several others. It is vital for one to cleanse the body of impurities in order to maintain a healthy system and avoid such illnesses, as there are no cure for these illnesses beyond cleansing and the maintenance of a healthy diet to allow the body to heal itself. Regular cleansing should include a diet rich in fiber as mentioned earlier, and the use of added fiber such as provided by consuming psyllium husk as a bulking agent along with laxative agents. More is discussed under the section Natural Hair Loss Remedies.

Although hair loss can be caused by many other variables, lack of proper nutrition will assuredly cause hair loss in many people. Fortunately, adopting a proper diet that includes the above nutrients can reverse hair loss caused by malnutrition. One thing for certain, regardless of whether your hair loss was caused by malnutrition or not, adopting a healthier diet will help the function of other areas of the body.

There are a number of foods to seek outin order to minimise and stop hair loss.

In Western society, hair loss ? especially male pattern hair loss ? is fodder for jokes, unless the hair loss is a result of chemotherapy or other medical treatments. If you're suffering from situational baldness or male/female pattern baldness, you may laugh about it among your friends. Chances are, however, that you're crying about it in privacy. But by no means are you alone. Fortunately, there are many natural remedies to relieve hair loss and the personal embarrassment that results from it.

We can blame the typical Australian diet for yet another unfavorable thing: Hair loss. Australia's high-fat, high-animal protein and high-salt diet damages the kidneys and creates acidic blood, thereby leading to hair loss, according to Paul Pitchford's Healing with Whole Foods and Janet Zand's, Allan N. Spreen's and James B. LaValle's Smart Medicine for Healthier Living. The typical American diet is also usually low in vitamins. This lifestyle leads to vitamin deficiency, which is another cause of hair loss. And thanks to the globalization of fast food chains and the American diet, we're exporting hair loss overseas.

If your diet is relatively healthy, you may have to scrutinize other potential causes and use the process of elimination to determine the cause of your hair loss. For example, do you dye your hair or treat it with other chemicals? According to Bill Gottlieb's Alternative Cures, these treatments may be thinning your hair. Similarly, have you been experiencing a lot of stress in your life? Stress may literally be making you pull your hair out.

If you're a woman: Are you pregnant, menopausal or on birth control pills? These are three big factors in female hair loss. Hormone imbalance is arguably the most common cause of hair loss in females. Pregnancy, menopause and sometimes birth control pills can create hormone shifts, according to The Doctor's Book of Home Remedies for Women. In fact, according to Dr. Neal Barnard's Eat Right, Live Longer, "Childbirth almost always causes some degree of temporary hair loss, sometimes occurring after a delay of a few months? In other animals, this has a useful function; rabbits, for example, line their nests with shed hairs. Humans have less use for it." So unless you're intent on finding new ways to decorate your baby's room, you're just going to have to wait out the temporary hair loss. Excessive dieting also causes hormone shifts. Hair loss is thus one of the major symptoms of anorexia and bulimia.

If your hair loss is caused by a controllable factor, such as using chemical hair dyes, then by all means, change your behavior. Take vitamin supplements, stop dying your hair, change your shampoo or choose a different method of birth control. On the other hand, hair loss could also be genetic. No, you can't alter your genes yet. But you can rely on natural medicines to help counteract an inherited hair loss trait. Vitamin E, Golden Maidenhair (found in a tea shampoo), red sage extracts (also found in some shampoos) and formulas that mix turmeric with horsetail or oat straw are all found to prevent or slow the process of hair loss. Additionally, eating a diet high in fruits and vegetables and low in starch may slow down the hair loss process, according to Arthur C. Upton in Staying Healthy in a Risky Environment. The average human sheds between 50 and 100 hair strands every day. If you're shedding more than that, you don't have to accept it as a burden you must bear. A little lifestyle change goes a long way to stop hair loss. If your parents or grandparents exhibit hair loss, you're not doomed, but you do have an even greater need to watch your diet and use herbal remedies. If you do start losing your hair, however, handling it well can make all the difference between hair loss becoming a source of embarrassment or a fashion statement.

Avoid consuming excessive amounts of animal fats, animal proteins, and salt. This may help delay hair loss in men prone to male pattern baldness.

Acute deficiency may cause hair loss or thinning, dermatitis, and decreased growth. Both poor appetite and digestion are also experienced by adults with zinc deficiency. Loss of taste sensation may occur, as can brittleness of the nails or white spots on the nails, termed leukonykia. These and most other symptoms can be corrected with supplemental zinc. Sulfur may be helpful as well. Skin rashes, dry skin, and delayed healing of skin wounds or ulcers may result from zinc deficiency, and stretch marks, called striae, are also produced by this condition. Zinc and copper are both needed for cross-linking of collagen, and when they are low, the skin tissue may break down.

If you are experiencing hair loss, have a hair analysis done to uncover any nutritional deficiencies or toxic metal contamination. As hair is formed, available minerals and amino acids circulating in the blood are laid down in the hair. A hair analysis can therefore provide a picture of your mineral status and pick up any exposure to toxic metals. You should also consult your physician to check for an underlying health problem, such as hypothyroidism or infection.

For men, Dr. Klaper says that a low-fat diet may help slow down the balding process. "On some level, male pattern baldness might be tied to increased testosterone levels during puberty, which are often the result of a high-fat diet or eating too many animal products," says Dr. Klaper. "If you look at Japan, male pattern baldness was almost unheard of prior to World War II. The Japanese diet is now far more fatty and Westernized, and Japanese men are going bald everywhere. It's clear that a high-fat, meat-based diet raises testosterone levels, and that may adversely affect hair follicles. I'm not sure eating low-fat foods will stop hair loss, but it might slow it down."

Don't be surprised, this and many more entertaining stories are floating around as people are unable to filter fact from fiction when it comes to hair loss and get so confused that real causes and right treatments for their baldness or hair loss are missed by them.

Some companies and individuals seek to exploit hair loss myths to make a fast buck. They try and, sometimes quite successfully, sell bogus hair loss treatments on the basis of tall promises, to men and women desperate to solve their hair loss problems. Also people with hair loss, particularly women, are hesitant to talk about an issue that remains sensitive and sometimes quite emotional.

Let's examine some of the myths in the light of the facts on this website. Some of them have been heard so many times that they begin sounding true! But are they? No way. A myth is just that - a myth. There's no scientific evidence that supports any of these tall tales.


The maternal side of your family is responsible for the inheritance of pattern baldness
What a bunch of hooey! The hair loss gene does not get transferred from your mother's side, nor does it skip a generation. What is more, probably there isn't even one single hair loss gene. According to the scientists pattern baldness might be because of interaction of several genes inherited from both parents.


It is for men only
In reality, both men and women suffer baldness, though the degree of loss tends to vary by gender. The timing and pattern of pattern baldness is also different in men and women. Pattern baldness commonly starts to develop in men in their 30s and 40s. In women, its occurrence commonly begins when they are in their 40s or 50s, although it can occur as early as the 20s. Pattern wise, front and at the top of the head in men lose hair first while in women, the hair thins diffusely throughout the top of the scalp.

That's why there are hair loss treatments available for both men and women which if done properly and regularly can check hair loss to some extent.


Poor blood flow causes pattern baldness
This myth has been used and popularized by companies seeking to sell hair loss products. But if it had been true, hair transplants would not have worked so well.


Pattern baldness is caused by hair mites, plugged follicles
No, it is just another attempt by manufacturers seeking to sell their shampoos. They claim that pattern hair loss is due to a hair mite called the demodex mite that can be removed with certain shampoos, or due to plugged hair follicles, which can be unplugged with a shampoo.

This is a myth because there's no evidence that corroborates any of these theories. The dermodex mite is found in the hair follicles on the face and scalp of most of the population. Had the mite been responsible for hair loss, most of the population would have been bald. So far as plugged hair follicles are concerned, they simply lead to ingrown hairs.


Cut your hair to make them stronger
Total claptrap! Hair fiber is dead material. It has no way to send a signal to the hair follicle root that it has been cut. Cutting your hair will only make it shorter and hairs grow almost exactly half an inch per month, no matter what you do or take.


Brush your hair as much as you can
It might make you look good, but overdoing it is very bad for your hair and the leading contributor to split ends and hair breakage. Sure comb your hair, but once it is in place, STOP.


Tight hats are behind baldness
Young men entering the military service are required to wear hats, and supposedly show signs of going bald soon after. This is just coincidental timing. The age of entering the military matches with that of the beginning of male pattern hair loss. Hats do cause hair breakage or split ends, but not baldness.

Now that you know what is true and what is just figment of one's imagination , you can decide what are the causes behind it and what would be the best treatment for it in consultation with a qualified medical professional.

Article Source : Pg. 12

About Author
Both Lachlan Walker & Jessica Thomas are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Lachlan Walker has sinced written about articles on various topics from Laptops, Lose Weight and Beauty Tips. Lachlan Walker has been promoting the benefits of herbal and alternative treatments through such websites as for many years. The web. Lachlan Walker's top article generates over 6600 views. to your Favourites.

Jessica Thomas has sinced written about articles on various topics from Hair Care. Jessica manages the Pattern-baldness: male and female web site. Our web site has more detailed advice and information about hair loss and. Jessica Thomas's top article generates over 1900 views. to your Favourites.
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