Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My hair started thinning after my pregnancies; might have been age, too.
For me, 5% Rogaine Foam once daily has worked. It took a few months. (Aveda also has a product, which I have not tried, mainly due to cost and because Rogaine is FDA-approved.)
I also started using Living Proof "Perfect Hair Day" which lets me go 3-4 days without washing/shampooing my hair. (My hair would really fall out when shampooing, and break during drying.) So that really helped a lot.
Sometimes, I use dry shampoo rather than washing with shampoo/water.
Also, I only blow dry my hair after it has partially air-dried or "Turbie Twist" dried -- less heat, less styling means less damage.
The Aveda "Invati" line doesn't grow new hair. I tried it. It didn't do anything.
Anonymous wrote:My hair started thinning after my pregnancies; might have been age, too.
For me, 5% Rogaine Foam once daily has worked. It took a few months. (Aveda also has a product, which I have not tried, mainly due to cost and because Rogaine is FDA-approved.)
I also started using Living Proof "Perfect Hair Day" which lets me go 3-4 days without washing/shampooing my hair. (My hair would really fall out when shampooing, and break during drying.) So that really helped a lot.
Sometimes, I use dry shampoo rather than washing with shampoo/water.
Also, I only blow dry my hair after it has partially air-dried or "Turbie Twist" dried -- less heat, less styling means less damage.
Anonymous wrote:Also think of dying your hair closer to the color of your scalp so the hair loss will not be as noticeable. And use hair products that keep your hair in control and make it look thicker. The NY Times a while ago had tips on women with hair loss. You might want to Google that.
Anonymous wrote:Also think of dying your hair closer to the color of your scalp so the hair loss will not be as noticeable. And use hair products that keep your hair in control and make it look thicker. The NY Times a while ago had tips on women with hair loss. You might want to Google that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 52 and post-menopausal. I ended up getting cortisone shots in my scalp. It's the only thing that seemed to work. I had my thyroid checked, taking multi-vitamins, Biotin, etc. Made no difference. I've done 2 rounds - shots every 6 weeks for 6 months. It's not as thick as in my 20s but better than it was 4 years ago. FWIW - I had a lot of problems finding good information on this. Research is mixed on the shots but it's the only thing I found that made any difference.
Do you have the name of the doctor you saw for this? I will ask my derm about this when I see her tomorrow.
Following. I’m in my early thirties but have always had fine/thin hair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 52 and post-menopausal. I ended up getting cortisone shots in my scalp. It's the only thing that seemed to work. I had my thyroid checked, taking multi-vitamins, Biotin, etc. Made no difference. I've done 2 rounds - shots every 6 weeks for 6 months. It's not as thick as in my 20s but better than it was 4 years ago. FWIW - I had a lot of problems finding good information on this. Research is mixed on the shots but it's the only thing I found that made any difference.
Do you have the name of the doctor you saw for this? I will ask my derm about this when I see her tomorrow.
Anonymous wrote:I'm 52 and post-menopausal. I ended up getting cortisone shots in my scalp. It's the only thing that seemed to work. I had my thyroid checked, taking multi-vitamins, Biotin, etc. Made no difference. I've done 2 rounds - shots every 6 weeks for 6 months. It's not as thick as in my 20s but better than it was 4 years ago. FWIW - I had a lot of problems finding good information on this. Research is mixed on the shots but it's the only thing I found that made any difference.