Take about a half a cup of lemon juice and a cotton ball and rub the juice over the affected areas. Should help. Also try changing your diet, it can effect hair health
Getting rid of dandruff in one day is impossible. Dandruff is a condition that takes time to heal. Scrubbing your hair with anti-dandruff shampoo could help you cure it in about a week, and if that doesn't work you'll have to see a dermotologist.
You can use a shampoo designed specifically for treating dandruff. It will say so on the label. But don't mistake dandruff for regular dead-scalp skin. Dandruff is a horrid yellow fungus, not the the white flakes that fall out when you brush a hand through your hair. Washing and combing can usually remedy that.
Baldness.
No. You can have hair on your breasts, but pubic hair is in the pubic area of your body.
pupose of women pubic hair
Head lice: ask a friend with good eyesight to examine your scalp closely in a bright light. Body lice: examine the seams of clothes you have been wearing next to the body. I mean take them off and look at them straight away. It's no good if you take them out of your drawer. Pubic (crab) lice: Look at the skin under your pubic hair with a magnifying glass. All these lice are very small, whitish, and look like little crabs or scorpions. They move slowly.
The dandruff and oil actually help our hair by protecting it from bacteria and chemicals. When we wash our hair everyday, it kills the dandruff and washes away the oil. Leaving our hair vulnerable. So you should wash your hair once a week. So your hair can be healthy.
Dandruff (seborrheic dermatitis) is a completely separate condition to hair loss. (Hair grows out from follicles "beneath" the scalp surface.) Cell loss due to dandruff can actually increase the rate of scalp cell growth, but not hair growth.
because if there is dandruff, it will shake it out.
Dandruff is caused by tiny flakes of dead human skin.
knits are usually easier to see than dandruff when your hair is parted
Dandruff-free hair translates as 'des cheveux sans pellicules' in French.