From Root to Ritual
"Adrenal fatigue" isn't a real diagnosis. But the hair loss it causes is very real — here is what's actually happening.
"Adrenal fatigue" has 16 million TikTok views and zero recognition
from medical organisations as a real diagnosis. What IS real is
HPA axis dysfunction — a disruption of the cortisol signalling
system that mainstream medicine has documented extensively. The
hair loss it causes is genuine: hair thinning, increased shedding,
and reduced density are all documented outcomes of dysregulated
cortisol. Here is the honest version of the adrenal fatigue story
— and what actually helps.
The birth control conversation your doctor probably didn't have with you about your hair.
Birth control pills can influence hair health, sometimes improving or
worsening hair loss — and the American Hair Loss Association has
specific guidance on this that most women are never told when they're
prescribed. The key variable: the androgen index of the progestin in
your pill. High androgen index progestins can trigger or worsen female
pattern hair loss in susceptible women. Low androgen index pills may
actually help. Here is how to know which category yours falls into.
The anti-inflammatory diet and hair loss: what a review of 24 studies actually found — including two food warnings most articles skip.
A peer-reviewed review of 24 studies covering 1,787 patients found
that the Mediterranean diet and isoflavone-rich soy contain
anti-inflammatory nutrients that may promote hair health in AGA.
The gluten-free diet only helped in AA patients who also had celiac
disease — not in people without it. And high mercury fish consumption
was linked to AA and telogen effluvium. Most hair-and-diet articles
miss both caveats. Here is the honest summary.
Smoking and hair loss: the evidence is stronger than most people realise — and the mechanism explains exactly why.
A 2024 meta-analysis in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology — the
first of its kind — quantified the smoking-AGA relationship in men.
Multiple peer-reviewed studies confirm smokers have significantly
higher rates of androgenetic alopecia. The mechanism is specific:
nicotine narrows blood vessels, reducing oxygen to follicles;
tobacco toxins increase oxidative stress; and smoking accelerates
the hormonal cascade that drives miniaturisation. Most of the
research is in men — here is what we know and don't know for women.
Does alcohol cause hair loss? The honest answer is more complicated than yes or no.
A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis in Alcohol and Alcoholism
examined the alcohol-AGA connection. The finding: alcohol doesn't
directly cause hair loss, but chronic heavy drinking disrupts nutrient
absorption, raises estrogen in men, elevates cortisol, dehydrates the
scalp, and disturbs sleep — five of the drivers this series has covered
as central to hair loss. And one study found that abstainers had higher
rates of crown hair loss than moderate drinkers — a result nobody
expected. Here is the complete picture.
The sleep hormone your hair follicles also respond to — and why the gummy on your nightstand isn't the same thing.
A review of 11 studies covering 2,267 patients found positive hair
growth outcomes in 8 of them — from melatonin applied directly to
the scalp. Not the sleep supplement. The topical version. Hair
follicles have their own melatonin receptors and respond to it
locally, not through the bloodstream. Here is what the research
actually shows — and the one timing detail that makes a real
difference.
The pool isn't making your hair fall out. But it might be making everything else worse.
A study comparing 67 professional swimmers to 54 non-swimmers found
no significant difference in hair loss between the groups — despite
clear signs of chlorine damage in the swimmers' hair. So chlorine
doesn't cause hair loss. But it does strip natural oils, disrupt
scalp pH, irritate already-sensitive scalps, and compound the damage
from heat styling, chemical processing, and sun exposure — all in
the same summer week. Here is the honest picture and the simple
pre- and post-swim routine that addresses it.
If your scalp has ever burned, this explains why that matters more than you think.
Sunburn on the scalp is more common than people realise — and it does
more than hurt. Overexposure to UV radiation can disrupt the normal
hair growth cycle and prematurely push hairs into the shedding phase.
There is also a vicious cycle most people never connect: thinning hair
exposes more scalp, exposed scalp burns more easily, and a burned scalp
sheds more hair. Here is what's actually happening and the simplest
way to break the cycle.
How Organic Hair Care, Self-Care, and Fragrance Work Together
Organic hair care is not just about what you leave out of your routine.
It is about what the ritual gives back. When thoughtful hair care, a
few slow minutes in the shower, and a fragrance that actually feels
like you all work together, the whole morning shifts. Here is how to
make the three work as one — and why the scent of your shampoo matters
more than most people think.
The pill version of minoxidil just got its first official clinical guidelines. Here is what changed — and what you need to know before asking your doctor about it.
In January 2025, an international expert panel published formal clinical
guidelines for low-dose oral minoxidil in JAMA Dermatology — the first
time the medical establishment formally endorsed it. A 2025 meta-analysis
of 2,933 patients confirmed it works. 79.7% of women in one real-world
study showed clinical improvement. But there are four things most women
are never told before they start — including one side effect that affects
15% of patients and arrives without warning.
PRP just got its most rigorous review yet. 43 randomised controlled trials, 1,877 patients. Here is what the evidence actually says.
A 2025 meta-analysis of 43 randomised controlled trials covering 1,877
patients found that activated PRP was effective in increasing hair density
and minimising recurrence vs placebo — while non-activated PRP was
associated with a higher frequency of adverse effects. The distinction
most people seeking PRP treatment never ask about is the one that
determines whether it works. Here is the complete evidence picture.
Omega-3 and hair loss: the anti-inflammatory case, the mouse study that complicated it, and what the human evidence actually shows.
A clinical study found omega-3/6 complex with Serenoa repens, linseed,
and borage inhibits total 5α-reductase and improved hair density in
83.3% of subjects at 6 months. A separate prospective study confirmed
anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative stress effects. But an animal model
found n-3 fatty acids can induce hair loss in mice through immune
activation. Here is the complete evidence picture — and what it means
for dosing and sourcing.
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