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5 New Facts About Menopause and Hair Loss
Female Hair Loss

5 New Facts About Menopause and Hair Loss

Jan Lingaurd 24/04/2020

Menopause is one of the most frequent causes of female hair loss, and also one of the least liked symptoms, from a self esteem point of view anyway.

menopause hair loss

Female hair loss can be pretty damaging

to any woman in today’s modern culture, which emphasizes the importance of a fashionable hairstyle.

Just think on the flourishing multi-billion dollar in the hair care industry and the many ads and commercials on shampoo, designing products and hair loss therapies.

Like giving birth, menopause is a normal occurring state for women and – also like childbirth – the changes exhibited in the body can be stressful.

Females start menopause among the ages of 30 and 70, with most beginning in the middle of their mid-40s and mid-50s.

Though menopause can occur abnormally, that is, after surgical or medical treatment.

 In this case, the signs may be much more acute and female hair loss is much more probable.

Female hair loss is not a definite sign of menopause.

 It is a less commonplace than, for example, hot flashes and mood changes. Women face female hair loss to varying levels and some don’t encounter it at all.

Precisely what triggers hair loss is still not apparent.

But numerous specialists have said that the most prevalent cause is androgenetic alopecia or genetic receding.

This refers to a natural process whereby different hair follicles break down the female sex-hormone testosterone.

Menopausal females undergoing hair loss feel a higher rate of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone, or DHT.

It is the result of DHT on hair follicles that cause hair loss.

In the same regard, women who have uncharacteristically high levels of male sex hormones can also suffer thinning of scalp hair.

Symptoms that these women exhibit include lots of body and facial hair, unusual menstrual patterns and increased clitoris.

Additionally, things like anaemia, thyroid disorders, fungal diseases and traumatic life conditions, can cause hair loss in menopausal ladies.

Just as that female hair loss reveals itself as a symptom about three months after the starting cause begins, so too does woman hair loss take about three months to show the consequences of treatment.

menopause hair loss

Estrogenic remedies like soy isoflavones or hormone replacement treatments will need to be applied for about three months before one can find out if it’s working for you.

How adverse a menopausal female feels towards her hair loss varies from person to person.

In circumstances where it changes her quality of life and self-esteem,

it is best to tackle the challenge quickly.

A correct assessment by a specialist for causes of hair loss is needed to ascertain the core medical circumstances and a proper course of medication that produce the condition.

Summary
5 New Facts About Menopause and Hair Loss
Article Name
5 New Facts About Menopause and Hair Loss
Description
Menopause is one of the most frequent causes of female hair loss, and also one of the least liked symptoms, from a self esteem point of view anyway.
Author
Jan Lingaurd
Prev Article

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Jan Lingaurd
Jan Lingaurd

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