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  1. #1 11th January 2011 
    Semin's Avatar
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    The Science Of Gray Hair

    By Rhonda B. Graham

    Gray hair. To some, it's the beginning of the end. Others accept it as a public token of wisdom. A few think gray hair is caused by stress and worry, though there is no evidence to support this concept.

    Whether dyed, rinsed or allowed to grow naturally in its spongy, wiry manner, the arrival of gray hair can be a signature event.

    Health, heredity and environmental factors all affect when your hair begins turning gray. But the main cause is aging.

    Getting To The Root Of It
    It all begins when your body stops producing melanin. Each strand of your hair grows out of a follicle that has cells filled with melanin. These melanin-filled cells are called melanocytes.
    "Melanocytes pass melanin to adjoining cells called keratinocytes, which produce keratin -- hair's chief component," explains Laurence Meyer, M.D., Ph.D., professor of dermatology at the University of Utah. "When keratinocytes undergo their scheduled death, they retain melanin. The pigment visible in hair and in the skin lies in these dead keratinocyte bodies."
    Over time, the amount of melanin in the keratinocytes decreases. Gray hair is simply hair with declining levels of melanin. White hair has no melanin at all.

    The declining presence of melanin also appears to contribute to the lack of moisture in gray or white hair. So as your hair becomes lighter in color, its texture becomes dryer and coarser. That’s why gray hair tends to be more curly or wiry.

    The Process Of Turning Gray
    At the beginning of the graying process, follicles produce colorless strands in a random pattern. For unknown reasons, the first gray or white strands usually appear on your temples and the top of your head.

    Your hair doesn't actually "turn" gray -- it grows in this way. Every day, hairs fall out and new ones replace them. At any given time, about 85% to 90% of your hairs are actively growing, while the rest are in a resting state.

    Typically, one strand grows for two to four years. It then naturally enters a resting state for about two to four months, after which it falls out and is replaced by a new hair. On average, most people lose about 50 to 100 strands of head hair a day.

    Although it may seem like you "went gray overnight," in reality the gray strands become more noticeable in the normal course of shedding. Darker hairs normally hide the graying strands when they first come in.

    "It is often the case that when you hear the story about somebody's hair turning white overnight, it's because they have hair that is mixed, and the darker hair is more prominent until it begins falling out," Dr. Meyer says. This is especially true for people with telogen effluvium, a temporary condition in which a major stress, such as severe illness, surgery or sudden weight loss, speeds up shedding to 300 hairs a day.

    When It Happens
    There is currently no scientific way to tell when a particular cell or group of cells will stop producing melanin. "In the early stages of graying, the melanocytes are still present but inactive. Later on, they seem to decrease in number," Dr. Meyer says.

    This natural process of graying can begin as early as your teens. In most people, however, graying first becomes noticeable in their late 30s.

    Some researchers have shown that gender plays a role in graying. The average male starts to gray around age 30, while women typically began to notice lighter strands around age 35.
    Genetics are also a contributing factor. In some families, many members develop white hair in their 20s. "It obviously clusters in families in one sense. Whether that is a single gene or common gene we don't know," writes Dr. Meyer in the magazine Scientific American. "Generally speaking, among Caucasians, 50% are 50% gray by age 50. There is, however, wide variation. This number differs for other ethnic groups, again demonstrating the effect of genetics."

    But this biological fact of life varies greatly from person to person, which lead dermatologists and geneticists to conclude that age is not the most accurate indicator of when gray hair will appear.

    "The problem with this kind of science it that it has never been funded. Outside of hair dyes, nobody has ever looked at the genetics of graying hair specifically," says Dr. Meyer, who specializes in internal medicine and geriatrics.
  2. #2 2nd February 2016 
    raraririruru's Avatar
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    So, that was it. I thought gray hair only appears when we are stressed. There are really a lot of factors that contribute to it. Well, that includes genes as well, right?
  3. #3 10th February 2016 
    no-longer-a-baby's Avatar
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    I did not know that it is possible for your black hair to turn into white hair overnight. I never know that this kind of condition until now. At first, I thought this thread is nonsense considering that it is only about hair loss. Now, I know that great information can be taken from this thread.