GoodHealthMD.com
Why Does Hair Turn Grey?
Hair turns gray as we age because the follicles at the base of the hair
shaft cease to produce melanin. Each follicle contains a finite number of
pigment cells. These pigment cells produce melanin, a chemical that gives
the hair shaft (the visible strands) its color (black, brown, blonde, red,
and all shades in between.) The darkness or lightness of your hair depends
on how much melanin each strand contains. Melanin is the same pigment that
makes skin tan upon exposure to the sun.
With age, the pigment cells in the follicle gradually die off. As they do
so, that strand will no longer contain as much color and will show up as
silver, gray, or white as it grows. Eventually, all the pigment cells will
die and the hair becomes completely gray.
The age at which you go gray is determined by your genes. A ballpark guess
can be made by observing the ages at which your parents or grandparents went
gray. Some people go gray at young ages--as early as high school--whereas
some may not go gray before their forties or fifties. For example, most
Caucasian women show their first gray hairs during their mid thirties.
Graying typically occurs over a long time. From the time that a person
notices the first gray strands, it can take ten years or more to complete
the process.
While genetics is the most common cause of gray hair, other things can
contribute to graying. Lack of B vitamins (particularly pantothenic acid,
poor nutrition, anemia, (lack of iron in the blood), thyroid problems, and
even smoking can contribute to graying. Smokers are believed to gray at an
earlier rate because smoking depletes oxygen in the bodies tissues.
Treatment for diseases, such as cancer, or AIDS, can also cause hair to turn
gray.
It has been said that a shock can cause people to go gray overnight but that
theory has generally been discounted.
Although parents often like to claim that the stess of having children has
caused them to go gray, this theory has also been discounted.