This
is very visual as hair outside your scalp is dead. Hair has no blood, nerves or
muscles. If you cut your hair, you feel no pain; nor does hair bleed or pull a
muscle when stretched. So in this respect, you could say your ‘hair is dead’.
However, for a ‘dead’ fibre, your hair is quite remarkable! A healthy hair will
stretch up to 30% of its length, can absorb its weight in water and can also
swell up to 20% of its diameter. Not only that, but the strength of hair is
greater than that of copper wire of the same diameter; an average head of hair
can in fact support 23 tons in weight. You can change your hair’s colour shape,
hairstyle, length, curl; we wash our hair, brush and set our hair, pull it,
play with it, occasionally chew on it, rub it, straighten it, all to an
extraordinary degree. And yet, despite all of this flagrant abuse, our hair
remains amazingly resilient and tough.
Each
follicle, within the anatomy of the skin an indentation in your skin that hair
grows from, has its own blood, nerve and muscle supply. These nerves and
muscles give your hair its tactile properties, allowing the slightest movement
to be felt. When the muscles contract, your hair stands up more and pinches the
skin, causing ‘goose bumps’. You inherit this characteristic from animals – the
bristling quills of a petrified porcupine are an exaggerated example.
Furthermore,
your hair is the second fastest growing cell in your body, bone marrow being
the first. This means that your anatomy of hair is extremely sensitive to
changes going on within you; it is often a result of internal problems and
imbalances that hair loss and/or lacklustre hair can occur. Blood capillaries
surrounding your follicle provide each individual hair with the nourishment
needed for cell production and growth. Therefore, the hair anatomy if you
aren’t getting the vitamins, proteins, complex carbohydrates (energy) and
minerals you need, your hair will not receive them either and can suffer
greatly. Hormonal fluctuations caused by pregnancy menstruation, stress and
personal upsets also have a great impact on hair health and growth.
So, even though your hair itself is technically ‘dead’, the growth of your hair is closely intertwined with the inner workings of your body as well as your psychological and emotional state. What you do, feel, eat and experience all shape the way your hair looks, feels and grows.
So, even though your hair itself is technically ‘dead’, the growth of your hair is closely intertwined with the inner workings of your body as well as your psychological and emotional state. What you do, feel, eat and experience all shape the way your hair looks, feels and grows.
For
hair treatment call for appointment on 9004839333.Clinics at Malad,Juhu and
Bandra in Mumbai.Treaments for skin and nails are also done.
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