Hair Structure and Hair Life Cycle. Interesting to know.
Hair Stucture
Hair is composed of strong structural protein called
keratin. This is the same kind of protein that makes up the nails and the outer
layer of skin.
Each strand of hair consists of three layers.
An innermost layer or medulla which is only present in large
thick hairs.
The middle layer known as the cortex. The cortex provides
strength and both the color and the texture of hair.
The outermost layer is known as the cuticle. The cuticle is
thin and colorless and serves as a protector of the cortex.
Structure of the hair root
Below the surface of the skin is the hair root, which is
enclosed within a hair follicle. At the base of the hair follicle is the dermal
papilla. The dermal papilla is feed by the bloodstream which carries
nourishment to produce new hair. The dermal papilla is a structure very
important to hair growth because it contains receptors for male hormones and
androgens. Androgens regulate hair growth and in scalp hair Androgens may cause
the hair follicle to get progressively smaller and the hairs to become finer in
individuals who are genetically predisposed to this type of hair loss.
The Hair Growth Cycle
Hair follicles grow in repeated cycles. One cycle can be
broken down into three phases.
Anagen - Growth Phase
Catagen - Transitional phase
Telogen - Resting Phase
Each hair passes through the phases independent of the
neighboring hairs.
Anagen Phase - Growth Phase
Approximately 85% of all hairs are in the growing phase at
any one time. The Anagen phase or growth phase can vary from two to six years.
Hair grows approximately 10cm per year and any individual hair is unlikely to
grow more than one meter long.
Catagen Phase - transitional phase
At the end of the Anagen phase the hairs enters into a
Catagen phase which lasts about one or two weeks, during the Catagen phase the
hair follicle shrinks to about 1/6 of the normal length. The lower part is
destroyed and the dermal papilla breaks away to rest below.
Telogen Phase - resting phase
The resting phase follows the catagen phase and normally
lasts about 5-6 weeks. During this time the hair does not grow but stays
attached to the follicle while the dermal papilla stays in a resting phase
below. Approximately 10-15 percent of all hairs are in this phase at an one
time.
At the end of the Telogen phase the hair follicle re-enters
the Anagen phase. The dermal papilla and the base of the follicle join together
again and a new hair begins to form. If the old hair has not already been shed
the new hair pushes the old one out and the growth cycle starts all over again.
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