Yes. Thymic involution (TI) is, put simply, the shrinking of your thymus gland as your grow older. The rate of TI directly correlates to the rate at which you lose your hair.
Another interesting fact is that, as TI progresses, the hormones, such as testosterone, also increase, leading the majority of scientists to believe that hair loss is due to hormones.
I believe, as a bioengineer and avid nutritionist, that thymic involution is the REAL cause of hair loss. A small group of scientists, particularly in Europe, also believe this. Studies have also confirmed that thymic peptide levels around hair follicles are directly related to the continued growth of hair, and thymic peptides applied topically can regrow hair.
Another thing that I've found is that TI is genetic, just like scientists say that male pattern baldness is.
Could male pattern baldness be caused by genetically preordained thymic involution?
There are only a few things that can halt or reverse thymic involution that I have found:
The first is colostrum, preferably "first milking" colostrum.
The second is thymus gland - organic is best taken from range fed cows. The third, and I'm not quite sure this would reverse thymic involution, but it's definitely good for thymus function, is zinc, which binds to thymic peptides to activate them.
A hair is a protein secretion by a tiny gland called a hair follicle. These glands can die, at which point you lose the hair in that location.
Yes it can. If it is on your head it is fairly obvious, but any shock may cause you to lose your hair.
yes you can. but only surgically.
Trichomoniasis does not cause hair loss.
No.
Some people lose their hair cause they are either just getting old or they have cancer.
A steam bath and sauna may cause the hair to frizz and possibly cause the hair to lose volume if styled.
pollution,stress,cheating,and sometimes ppl how i helped!
hyugtuyyg
Maybe if you leave it running on you for at least a week.
A gland in the cats' brain realese a hormone that causes the body to lose its hair. This usually happens during the spring.
Things which cause hairloss, but not not include "stress" are: alopecia, male-pattern balding, chemotherapy treatment, illness, and anemia. So yes, you can lose hair without the cause being stress-related.