The science of hair growth, and what you can do for a better scalp and more hair.

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Have Hair.

(Note: See your licensed doctor for medical concerns. This site is not providing medical information, it is providing scientific information only, based on opinion and conjecture and is not to be taken literally, lest having hereby been forewarned, it be at your own risk, otherwise close this page and do not read the following.)

A variety of things can cause hair loss, such as chemicals being too strong, as perhaps for some people with using body bar soap on the head (which may cause dander flaking) instead of a milder shampoo.

Over-care and under-care are both valid concerns. Your Ph balance is very important (acidic :: caustic ratio).

Yet it is not just about external chemicals, but also about your health. For instance, lack of zinc has been associated with greyness. Lack of zinc can occur from sexual activity, as zinc is lost with ejaculation.

Food supplements are important. Getting ample chromium, for instance, is said to improve hair gloss.

Growth hormones need care and nurturing daily. Don't let them starve and don't let them have an overdose of anything harmful. This can include a vitamin, useful in the right proportion, yet often harmful in quantities too high.

Upsetting God by playing golf in a thunderstorm Sunday morning is not recommended.

Certain mild pulses of electromagnetic energy can be used to coax chemicals from cells, such as to release more growth hormones.

Similar electromagentic energy is used to help skull concussions and bone fractures heal. And there are many other treatment applications.

Marked success has been among people with hair loss due to cancer.

Uneven and/or unusual changes to the body may also cause hair loss, such as stress, or pathological disorders.

With stress, the entire body can be helped, or hurt.

Some stress activates the pituitary and adrenal glands, heightening the yield of fuel to the brain in the form of sugar and adrenaline, while cortisol dampens white blood cells, leaving us less protected.

Too much stress shrinks the brain and cracks arteries. Yeah, it may cause baldness too.

Various pathologies, such as schizophrenia, have their toll on the body.

Whether sex, or gambling, or television, or alcohol, or eating, or so on, habits can be seen as, or perhaps should be seen as pathologies.

Consider how an old (perhaps bald) rapidly aging person likes a routine. Being stuck in a rut works to accomplish two things: both to strengthen the body in that regard, and in counterpoint, to weaken the body in that regard.

Strength might be better stated as adaption. Weakness comes with depletion of chemical fuel reserves, or a lower replenishment rate than the reduction rate.

So, if you're stuck in a rut of eating, try fasting; if you always jog, try the Sabbath; if you're glued to the TV, practice a musical instrument (such entertains many neurons).

A pathology such as schizophrenia is characterized by cognitive dysfunction, so as such, does not tell the hair nor other body parts how to live properly. It affects 1% of the population and current research into genomic factors have indicated many polymorphisms may be associative.

Positron emission tomography depicts schizophrenic abnormalities, such as bilateral temporal gyrus activities. How can you have good hair if that happens?

Prevalent in 21% of women and 13% of men, major depression is another disorder involving pre-synaptic neuron transporter monoaminergic reuptake inhibition piling transmitters while starving vesicles.

Bipolar disorder also reaches 1% of the population. And attention deficit hyperactivity affects nearly 10% of youth while as little as 2% of the adult population.

The point is, these various pathologies can be treated with drugs, yet as drug history reveals, many drugs hide the root causes and often do more damage than good due to side effects.

Remember, mistakes by the USA medical community costs more lives than all the USA wars put together.

What then? If you have hair loss, it may be a warning sign of other pending adverse conditions, but you don't have to have an anxiety attack. You're normal.

Live sensibly, vary your food patterns, exercise, get smarter, and pray.

Learn about your hair loss and/or other problems, the Internet is a great source of help.

You may want to use magnets on your scalp (also known to relieve certain headaches), but you are warned against direct electric current applications to the body.

The brain largely consists of mental trails. These trails are normal channels of electric energy.

Electric and magnetism work together, yet placing electrodes is less desirable as improper new channels (altering your mind by relatively random synthetic force) may be created more readily than mild magnetism would do, at least that may be a good guess.

The brain is not normally associated with working interacting with the body, except through nerves. Chemicals enter and leave the brain through blood, yet the nerves tell the body what to do, including sending more or less blood, and including telling the hair to fall out or to grow faster.

The nerves in the backbone must have care. Rough sports are not backbone friendly.

Loss of air to the brain causes problems in minutes, loss of blood to the brain causes problems (fainting) in about ten seconds. Loss of nerve function at the root of the brain (before the first cervical vertebrae, C1) is nearly instantaneous, perhaps 300 miles per hour.

Virtually all brain activity sends it's messages (and receives feedback) through C1.

So a vertebrae such as C1 out of alignment, a routine occurance, such as daily for some people, directly effects the scalp. Very little errant pressure against a nerve can have immediate and dramatic affects.

In closing, study your particular medical condition and work from there. Be wise in everything. Perhaps you'll be the next one to discover something new.

Dr. Robert (Bob) Ross Benchoff 3/24/2004


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