Greying of hair
Greying of hair | |
---|---|
Other names | Greying, graying, canities, achromotrichia |
Psychological distress | |
Causes | Aging |
Treatment | Accepting the condition, medications |
Greying of hair, also known as greying, canities, or achromotrichia, is the progressive loss of pigmentation in the hair, eventually turning the hair grey or white which typically occurs naturally as people age.
Terminology
Greying of hair is the partial or complete process of a hair becoming grey or white. It is also known as canities or achromotrichia. The word "canities" is derived from the
Overview
Changes in hair color typically occur naturally as people age, eventually turning the hair grey and then white. This normally begins in the early to mid-twenties in men and late twenties in women. More than 60 percent of Americans have some grey hair by age 40. The age at which greying begins seems almost entirely due to genetics. Sometimes people are born with grey hair because they inherit the trait.[1]
The order in which greying happens is usually: nose hair, hair on the head, beard, body hair, eyebrows.[2]
Greying is a gradual process; according to a study by
Causes
Grey or white hair is not caused by a true grey or white pigment, but is due to a lack of pigmentation and melanin. The clear hairs appear as grey or white because of the way light is reflected from the hairs.
The change in hair color occurs when melanin ceases to be produced in the hair root and new hairs grow in without pigment. The
In non-balding individuals, hair may grow faster once it turns grey.
Several genes appear to be responsible for the process of greying. Bcl2 and Bcl-w[7] were the first two discovered, then in 2016, the IRF4 (interferon regulatory factor 4) gene was announced after a study of 6,000 people living in five Latin American countries. However, it found that environmental factors controlled about 70% of cases of hair greying.[8]
In some cases, grey hair may be caused by thyroid deficiencies,
Greying of hair may be triggered by the accumulation of hydrogen peroxide and abnormally low levels of the enzyme catalase, which breaks down hydrogen peroxide and relieves oxidative stress in patients with vitiligo. Since vitiligo can cause eyelashes to turn white, the same process is believed to be involved in hair on the head (and elsewhere) due to aging.[12][unreliable source?]
Stress
Anecdotes report that stress, both chronic and acute, may induce achromotrichia earlier in individuals than it otherwise would have.[13] Proponents point to survivors of disasters, such as Titanic survivor Harold Bride and prisoner of war John McCain, as well as high-level politicians such as Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. There is some evidence for chronic stress causing premature achromotrichia,[14] but no definite link has been established. It is known that the stress hormone cortisol accumulates in human hair over time, but whether this has any effect on hair color has not yet been resolved.[15] A 2020 paper, published in the journal Nature reported that stress can cause hair to lose its pigment. An overactive immune response can destroy melanocytes and melanocyte stem cells in black-haired rats. When intentionally subjecting them to panic, they bleached their coat. The next time the rats' coat grew, there were no melanocyte stem cells in these damaged follicles, so white hairs sprouted, and the color loss was permanent.[16]
UV damage
Excessive exposure to the sun is the most common cause of structural damage of the hair shaft. Photochemical hair damage encompasses hair protein degradation and loss, as well as hair pigment deterioration[17] Photobleaching is common among people with European ancestry. Around 72 percent of customers who agreed to be involved in a study and have European ancestry reported in a recent 23andMe research that the sun lightens their hair. The company also have identified 48 genetic markers that may influence hair photobleaching.[18]
Medical conditions
Albinism is a genetic abnormality in which little or no pigment is found in human hair, eyes, and skin. The hair is often white or pale blond. However, it can be red, darker blond, light brown, or rarely, even dark brown.
Malnutrition is also known to cause hair to become lighter, thinner, and more brittle. Dark hair may turn reddish or blondish due to the decreased production of melanin. The condition is reversible with proper nutrition.
Werner syndrome and pernicious anemia can also cause premature greying.
A 2005 uncontrolled study demonstrated that people 50–70 years of age with dark eyebrows but grey hair are significantly more likely to have
Artificial factors
A 1996
Grey hair may temporarily darken after inflammatory processes, after electron-beam-induced alopecia, and after some chemotherapy regimens. Much remains to be learned about the physiology of human greying.[22]
There are no special diets, nutritional supplements, vitamins, or proteins that have been proven to slow, stop, or in any way affect the greying process, although many have been marketed over the years. However, French scientists treating leukemia patients with imatinib, a drug used in treating cancer, noted an unexpected side effect: some of the patients' hair color was restored to their pre-grey color.[23]
Changes after death
The hair color of buried bodies can change. Hair contains a mixture of black-brown eumelanin and red-yellow pheomelanin. Eumelanin is less chemically stable than pheomelanin and breaks down faster when oxidized. The color of hair changes faster under extreme conditions. It changes more slowly under dry oxidizing conditions (such as in burials in sand or in ice) than under wet reducing conditions (such as burials in wood or plaster coffins).[24]
Management
The anti-cancer drug imatinib has recently been shown to reverse the greying process.[25] However, it is expensive and has potentially severe and deadly side effects, so it is not practical to use to alter a person's hair color. Nevertheless, if the mechanism of action of imatinib on melanocyte stem cells can be discovered, it is possible that a safer and less expensive substitute drug might someday be developed. It is not yet known whether imatinib has an effect on catalase, or if its reversal of the greying process is due to something else.[23]
See also
References
- PMID 23974581.
- ^ 鼻毛にも白髪は生えるの? (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- ^ Copping, Jasper (30 September 2012). "Grey hair 'less prevalent than previously thought'". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2022-01-12. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
- ^ Giana, Bosa. "What Causes Hair To Go White? Let Us Find The Exact Reasons". gaizupath.com. Retrieved 16 February 2017.
- PMID 20805969.
- ^ Slominski A, Paus R. Melanogenesis is coupled to murine anagen: Toward new concepts for the role of melanocytes and the regulation of melanogenesis in hair growth. J Invest Dermatol. 1993;101:90S–7S
- ^ "Research yields clues to why hair turns gray". Associated Press. Retrieved 5 August 2011.
- ^ Storrs, Carina (1 March 2016). "First gray hair gene found, plucked out of research". CNN.
- PMID 1744541.
- ^ Weir, Sarah B. (2012-10-02). "Why does hair turn grey?". Yahoo! Lifestyle UK. Archived from the original on 2012-10-07. Retrieved 2012-11-10.
- ISBN 978-0-7216-2921-6.
- ^
Nsikan Akpan (3 May 2013). "Cure For Gray Hair Is Almost Here, Vitiligo Study Claims". Medical Daily. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
- ^ Saling, Joseph. "The Effects of Stress on Your Hair". Web MD. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
- ^ Ballantyne, Coco. "Fact or Fiction?: Stress Causes Grey Hair". Scientific American. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
- ^ Robert Preidt (17 Apr 2013). "Seriously Stressed? Hair Analysis Tells All, Study Finds". WebMD.
- ^ Popular Science, January 1, 2020
- PMID 19138021.
- ^ 23andMe. "Hair Lightening from the Sun - 23andMe". www.23andme.com. Retrieved 2020-01-08.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Bazian (7 May 2013). "No evidence of cure to prevent hair going grey". Filey and Hunmanby Mercury.
- PMID 16435045.
- PMID 8991008.
- PMID 3288386.
- ^ a b "Cancer drug restores hair colour". BBC News. 2002-08-08.
- ^ "Interactive Dig Hierakonpolis - Archaeological Hair". Archaeology.org. Archived from the original on 2011-12-10. Retrieved 2012-04-03.
- PMID 12167692.