Causes of hair loss

hairlossThe whole scalp contains about 100,000 hairs. Each hair presents a particular structure and is anchored in the skull. The hair follows a life cycle that can vary from one person to another and from one hair to another. A man with a healthy hair can lose a day on average from 40 to 100 hair per day.

We can talk about hair loss, when we start to lose more than 100 wires and this in a long period of time, for several months. A simple way to know how much hair you miss a day is to count the threads, for example, in the morning after shower, after you have brushed your hair. If you get more than 100 threads lost daily for several weeks, then you should begin to inform about available treatments available to stop the loss of the hair.
A male pattern baldness may be caused, temporarily or permanently, by a lot of factors. An infection of the scalp, for example, various diseases, cosmetic chemicals, drugs, a serious case of seborrhea, a poor circulation, an unbalanced nutrition. But 90% of cases are caused by what doctors call “male tendency to balding. In this circumstances, the hair begins to become rare in the area of temples, and hairline withdraws increasingly more, leaving the head naked. In the most serious cases, the victim no longer keep their hair than in a low circular area.

Causes of hair loss in male
Causes of traditional accepted male boldness are: old age, heredity, male hormones. But until recently scientists did not know what makes the outcome of these factors lead to balding. A Swedish scientist, Dr. Lars Engstrand, at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, seems to have found the answer to this question. Both men and women, in the early years, the membrane fine scalp is soft and elastic. It still remains so in women. But the male hormone responsible for male secondary sexual characteristics, such as change of voice, appearance of beard and body hair, cause a thickening of the membrane of the scalp. This slows the blood circulation in tiny capillaries located under the membrane, which supplies the bags or follicular papillae or hair growth with essential nutrients. Along with the thickening, follicular bags are becoming more brittle, as time passes, then atrophies and can lead to balding.
The Swedish scientist has demonstrated the validity of his theory of circulatory failure of the root hair, making more than 1,000 successful operations, eliminating the tension in the capillaries and allowing the hair to grow back more vigorously, even in the complete bald areas.
Also, the age, heredity and mental or emotional tension is prolonged as many factors involved in predisposition to the thickening of the membrane scalp. Specialists in nutrition add all these nutritional deficiencies.