It is a little too soon to be
optimistic but we are apparently discovering the plausible route to hair growth
activation and certainly seeing why it may well cut off. A number of empirical observations also
become clearer such as the relationship between cholesterol and hair loss.
Certainly improved nutrition has
generated healthier hair. Just following
up on that clue will help and likely pay serious dividends. We at least suspect now that the link may
actually be a lot more robust than otherwise thought.
Why did we start losing hair on
the scalp? We have a genetic niche in
which male pattern baldness is unavoidable and we have the rest who lose it as
they age.
It could all be linked to a
simple deficiency whose scarcity response cascade begins with simply releasing
the hair. That makes even more sense
when we recall that hair does excrete minerals and it may well be all about one
or the other such mineral that we take for granted but simply do not ingest sufficient
to maintain our hair.
It is all another argument for
using sea salt.
Yale researchers discover source of signals that trigger hair growth
By Darren
Quick
19:43 September 5, 2011
In news that offers hope to millions of chrome-domes everywhere - yours
truly included - Yale researchers have made a discovery that could lead to new
treatments for baldness. While men with male pattern baldness still have stem
cells in follicle roots, they need signals from within the skin to grow hair.
Until now, the source of those signals that trigger hair growth has been unclear,
but the Yale researchers claim to have now discovered it.
When hair dies, the researcher team led by Valerie Horsley, assistant
professor of molecular, cellular and developmental biology, observed that the
layer of fat in the scalp that comprises most of the skin's thickness shrinks.
When hair growth begins, the fat layer expands in a process called
adipogenesis. They identified a type of stem cell - adipose precursor cells -
within the skin's fatty layer that is involved in the creation of new fat cells.
They showed that these cells' production of molecules called PGDF (platelet
derived growth factors), was necessary to spur hair regrowth in mice.
Horsley's team is trying to identify other signals produced by adipose
precursor stem cells that may play a role in regulating hair growth. She also
wants to know whether these same signals are required for human hair growth.
"If we can get these fat cells in the skin to talk to the
dormant stem cells at the base of hair follicles, we might be able to get hair
to grow again," said Horsley.
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