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What do Charles Darwin, Michael Jordan, and Yoda have in common?
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They, like many other historical and fictive individuals, are bald, in some cases by their own choice.
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For centuries, a shining dome has been a symbol of intelligence, but despite this, many balding people still wish their hair would return.
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Scientists have long pondered, "Why do some people lose their hair, and how can we bring it back?"
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The full-headed among us have about 100,000 to 150,000 hairs on our scalps, and scientists have discovered two things about this dense thicket.
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Firstly, the sprouting hair we see is mostly made up of keratin, the protein leftover from dead cells that are forced upwards as new cells grow beneath them.
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Secondly, the structures that drive hair growth are called hair follicles, a network of complex organs that forms before we're born, and grows hair in an everlasting cycle.
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This cycle has three main phases.
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The first is anagen, the growth phase, which up to 90% of your hair follicles are experiencing right now, causing them to push up hair at a rate of one centimeter per month.
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Anagen can last for two to seven years, depending on your genes.
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After this productive period, signals within the skin instruct some follicles to enter a new phase known as catagen, or the regressing stage, causing hair follicles to shrink to a fraction of their original length.
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Catagen lasts for about two to three weeks and cuts blood supply to the follicle, creating a club hair, meaning it's ready to be shed.
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Finally, hairs enter telogen, the resting phase, which lasts for ten to twelve weeks, and affects about 5-15% of your scalp follicles.
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During telogen, up to 200 club hairs can be shed in a day, which is quite normal.
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Then, the growth cycle begins anew.
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But not all heads are hairy, and, in fact, some of them grow increasingly patchy over time in response to bodily changes.
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95% of baldness in men can be attributed to male pattern baldness.
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Baldness is inherited, and in people with this condition, follicles become incredibly sensitive to the effects of dihydrotestosterone, a hormonal product made from testosterone.
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DHT causes shrinkage in these overly sensitive follicles, making hair shorter and wispier.
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But loss isn't sudden.
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It happens gradually, along a metric known as the Norwood Scale, which describes the severity of hair loss.
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First, hair recedes along the temples, then hair on the crown begins to thin in a circular pattern.
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At the highest rating on the scale, these balding areas meet and expand dramatically, eventually leaving only a ring of sparse hair around the temples and the back of the head.
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Genetics isn't all that drives hair loss.
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Long periods of stress can release signals that shock follicles and force them into the resting phase prematurely.
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Some women experience this after childbirth.
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Follicles might also lose the ability to go into anagen, the growth phase.
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People going through chemotherapy treatment temporarily experience this.
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But while balding may look permanent, scientific investigation has revealed the opposite.
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Below the skin's surface, the roots that give rise to our hair actually remain alive.
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Using this knowledge, scientists have developed drugs that shorten the resting phase, and force follicles into anagen.
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Other drugs combat male pattern baldness by blocking the conversion of testosterone to DHT so that it doesn't affect those sensitive follicles.
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Stem cells also play a role in regulating the growth cycle, and so scientists are investigating whether they can manipulate the activity of these cells to encourage follicles to start producing hair again.
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And in the meantime, while scientists hone their hair-reviving methods, anyone going bald, or considering baldness, can remember that they're in great company.