Natural hair restoration is no longer a thing of the future. Person after person in the public eye steps forward to endorse a whole host of natural hair restoration products. They are simply queuing up to add their own personal endorsement, both men and women. The products are all natural or herbal.
We all want to find the best advice. Before discussing how to choose a decent guide or book for natural hair restoration, it might be a good idea to reflect on some facts about hair growth and death. This will inform us what to think about the general philosophy of natural hair restoration. I disagree, but some experts still believe more in synthetic products.
A normal person will grow around 2.2 million individual hairs in his life. On the other hand, the average person will lose around 2.1 million hairs throughout his life. That doesn't really mean we all end up bald. These figures are derived from tests performed during short periods of a subject's life. Hair loss and growth vary throughout life and it is empirically evident that most people have at least a little hair, often a full head, at the end of their lives.
Hair loss also varies enormously in incidence and location worldwide. For example, did you know that only 4% of male Danes experience mid-back hair loss in their lifetime, while the same problem is 5 times more common in the United States? By contrast, 19% of Danish women experience general frontal hair loss compared to 7% of American women.
Choosing the right natural hair restoration method for you and your condition is essential. For starters, it is a good idea to try a holistic approach. Only if necessary after that, move on to more specific cures.
Natural hair restoration guides should be discussing these kinds of facts. With natural and alternative treatments, it's always worth weighing the claims against the real facts. It is also true that natural restorative remedies often depend heavily on what can be found in the environment surrounding the victim. And there may be something in that.
Other objective information that a Natural hair restoration book should cover includes:
Males tend to start hair loss from the upper sides of the skull. The hair is pushed away from the forehead laterally and is known in the vernacular as a receding hairline. (Of course, this type of hair loss can stop naturally.)
An area of baldness often occurs at the apex, or on the top of the head, particularly in men. This is believed to be due to male hormones. An urban myth claims that bald men are more virile than their counterparts with full hair. There may be some truth to that. DHT, the hormone responsible, produces strong growth of facial hair, but it can also negatively affect the prostate.
Women are much more prone to general thinning hair. Again, this is believed to be the result of their different genetic makeup and hormones. Thinning hair is easier to treat naturally than other forms of hair loss.
Hair loss is particularly associated with stress. Episodes such as traumatic injuries, childbirth and stress at work can cause baldness and thinning of the hair.
Having a mother or father suffering from hair loss or thinning hair does not mean it will be passed on to a child of the same sex. Both parents' DNA contributes to each child's hair growth. Indeed, what that means is that a child with a bald father is not as likely to go bald if his mother has strong hair production.
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