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hair growth |
Hair growth
Learning
how and why our hair grows is essential when faced with impending baldness
or thinning hair. We have on average around 100,000 individual hairs on our
scalp, but actual hair growth only occurs in 90% of these hairs at any one
time. The other 10% of hair
is in the resting period.
Hair
growth lasts from 2 to 5 years, and when the hair stops
growing it falls out naturally. For
this reason we lose from 50-100 hairs each day, which is perfectly normal. The
hair growth phase is called the ‘anagen’ or growing phase. Each hair can grow as much as one centimeter a month, and
more quickly at the top than at the edges. Luckily for us, all the hair we
have enters this phase at different times, otherwise everyone would be
bald every couple of years. Mind
you, maybe that would be a good idea.
The hair that we can see is called the shaft.
These grow from something called the follicle.
Kind of like a tulip bulb, only smaller. Actually, hairs are nothing like tulips because the tulip
stem is alive whereas hair shafts are actually quite dead. |
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