From straight to curly, thick to thin: here’s how hormones and chemotherapy can change your hair


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Orawan Pattarawimonchai/Shutterstock



Head hair comes in many colours, shapes and sizes, and hairstyles are often an expression of personal style or cultural identity.

Many different genes determine our hair texture, thickness and colour. But some people’s hair changes around the time of puberty, pregnancy or after chemotherapy.



So, what can cause hair to become curlier, thicker, thinner or grey?

Curly or straight? How hair follicle shape plays a role​


Hair is made of keratin, a strong and insoluble protein. Each hair strand grows from its own hair follicle that extends deep into the skin.

Curly hair forms due to asymmetry of both the hair follicle and the keratin in the hair.



Follicles that produce curly hair are asymmetrical and curved and lie at an angle to the surface of the skin. This kinks the hair as it first grows.

The asymmetry of the hair follicle also causes the keratin to bunch up on one side of the hair strand. This pulls parts of the hair strand closer together into a curl, which maintains the curl as the hair continues to grow.

Follicles that are symmetrical, round and perpendicular to the skin surface produce straight hair.

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Each hair strand grows from its own hair follicle. Mosterpiece/Shutterstock​

Life changes, hair changes​


Our hair undergoes repeated cycles throughout life, with different stages of growth and loss.

Each hair follicle contains stem cells, which multiply and grow into a hair strand.



Head hairs spend most of their time in the growth phase, which can last for several years. This is why head hair can grow so long.

Let’s look at the life of a single hair strand. After the growth phase is a transitional phase of about two weeks, where the hair strand stops growing. This is followed by a resting phase where the hair remains in the follicle for a few months before it naturally falls out.

The hair follicle remains in the skin and the stems cells grow a new hair to repeat the cycle.

Each hair on the scalp is replaced every three to five years.

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Each hair on the scalp is replaced every three to five years. Just Life/Shutterstock​

Hormone changes during and after pregnancy alter the usual hair cycle​


Many women notice their hair is thicker during pregnancy.



During pregnancy, high levels of oestrogen, progesterone and prolactin prolong the resting phase of the hair cycle. This means the hair stays in the hair follicle for longer, with less hair loss.

A drop in hormones a few months after delivery causes increased hair loss. This is due to all the hairs that remained in the resting phase during pregnancy falling out in a fairly synchronised way.



Hair can change around puberty, pregnancy or after chemotherapy​


This is related to the genetics of hair shape, which is an example of incomplete dominance.

Incomplete dominance is when there is a middle version of a trait. For hair, we have curly hair and straight hair genes. But when someone has one curly hair gene and one straight hair gene, they can have wavy hair.



Hormonal changes that occur around puberty and pregnancy can affect the function of genes. This can cause the curly hair gene of someone with wavy hair to become more active. This can change their hair from wavy to curly.

Researchers have identified that activating specific genes can change hair in pigs from straight to curly.

Chemotherapy has very visible effects on hair. Chemotherapy kills rapidly dividing cells, including hair follicles, which causes hair loss. Chemotherapy can also have genetic effects that influence hair follicle shape. This can cause hair to regrow with a different shape for the first few cycles of hair regrowth.

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Your hair can change at different stages of your life. Igor Ivakhno/Shutterstock​



Hormonal changes as we age also affect our hair​


Throughout life, thyroid hormones are essential for production of keratin. Low levels of thyroid hormones can cause dry and brittle hair.

Oestrogen and androgens also regulate hair growth and loss, particularly as we age.



Balding in males is due to higher levels of androgens. In particular, high dihydrotestosterone (sometimes shortened to DHT), which is produced in the body from testosterone, has a role in male pattern baldness.

Some women experience female pattern hair loss. This is caused by a combination of genetic factors plus lower levels of oestrogen and higher androgens after menopause. The hair follicles become smaller and smaller until they no longer produce hairs.



Reduced function of the cells that produce melanin (the pigment that gives our hair colour) is what causes greying.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by , Theresa Larkin, Associate professor of Medical Sciences, University of Wollongong

 
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Yes, I have noticed differences in my hair at different stages of my life. It has changed from straight to wavy to curly and back again several times. Mostly it is curly. The colour has changed from light brown with golden strands through it to now a darker brown with a few gray flecks. I blame the darker colour from having it always covered during my early nursing career, back then everyone had to have pinned up hair covered by a sisters veil or a nurses cap. I have never put a dye of any kind in my hair so am happy with the colour I now have. If and when I go grey I will embrace it as I think by then I will have earned it. Neither of my parents had much gray hair, mum passed away at 57, dad 2 days before turning 70.
 
I lost nearly all of my hair through anxiety.
My older sister and younger brother passed away within 12 months of each other. It was an extremely upsetting period for my entire family because my darling siblings went through such a terrible time.
I guess my loss of hair can be seen as an homage to their memory.
Now I'm past 70, being almost bald does not worry me any more. All part of the circle of life.
 
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