Peppermint essential oil has been scientifically evaluated in the treatment of hair loss.
Peppermint oil has been reported to show anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and anti-fungal properties as well as a strong antioxidant.
In this study, peppermint oil was diluted with jojoba oil. It was applied to mice, once a day, 6 days a week, for 4 weeks.
After week 2, hair was growing rapidly, after week 3, rapidly new hair growth. After week 4, hair growth was reported at 92 %. The hair was noted as being very thick and long.
Wow, who knew ?
Posts: 3062 | From Florida | Registered: Nov 2016
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posted
Ask your doctor to check more than just the TSH. It's usually the thyroid to blame.
-------------------- --Lymetutu-- Opinions, not medical advice! Posts: 96238 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001
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map1131
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 2022
posted
I highly recommend the website Stop The Thyroid Madness. Lyme folks really need to be educated about the thyroid diseases.
Lyme is known to attack the thyroid. This STTM is also about the adrenals, which we know takes a big hit with Lyme from fight or flight.
It's more than having TSH test. TSH when the thyroid is in distress is actually a Pituitary reading.
That's what is wrong with so many Americans today.....they are sick with thyroid illnesses and doctors from ancient schooling were taught it's all about TSH.
randi, it could be answers for your struggling weight issues too.
Pam
-------------------- "Never, never, never, never, never give up" Winston Churchill Posts: 6489 | From Louisville, Ky | Registered: Jan 2002
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quote:Originally posted by map1131: [QB] That's what is wrong with so many Americans today.....they are sick with thyroid illnesses and doctors from ancient schooling were taught it's all about TSH.
- Amen!
My favorite site is Thyroid Advocates.
-------------------- --Lymetutu-- Opinions, not medical advice! Posts: 96238 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001
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klutzo
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 5701
posted
I would also have your ferritin level checked. If it is below 70, you may not be able to transport the hormone to your tissues. It needs to be at least 50, at minimum.
Your blood tests may all look fine, but it may be all staying in the blood, not in tissues where it needs to work, if there is not enough ferritin to transport it.
Labs usually will say that any ferritin above 12 is enough, but it isn't so.
I had perfect TSH, T3, T4, antibodies, reverse T3,etc. I am on NP Thyroid, but my ferritin was only 14, despite being post menopausal.
I had been vegetarian most of my life and have to force myself to eat beef twice weekly to slowly remedy the problem. It can be slow progress.
My ferritin is 40 now after almost 2 yrs. of working on this. If you can tolerate eating liver, you can move faster than I am.
Why not take an iron supplement? If your tummy can stand it, yes, but most of us just cannot tolerate them.
Even the "gentle" iron supps. are unbearable for me. I hear you can get injections, but I don't have those kind of doctors, sadly.
Also, one in six women have female pattern baldness, which is genetic. I have this, but it is happening younger than it should due to my Lyme affecting my ferritin/thyroid transport.
For me, taking a small dose of Maca root each morning has helped my hair start to grow back. I get it at vitacost, and I take 1 capsule instead of the 3 it says to take on the bottle.
Maca helps to balance hormones. Besides too little hair on my head, I have too much on my upper lip and it is much less since taking Maca.
I don't take the full dose, since it can be energizing, and I live in fight or flight hell, since I am 17 mos. into withdrawal from 33 yrs. of benzos. You may not need to take more than one bottle to rebalance things.
Best of luck!
Posts: 1269 | From Clearwater, Florida, USA | Registered: May 2004
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map1131
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 2022
posted
quote:Originally posted by Lymetoo:
quote:Originally posted by map1131: [QB] That's what is wrong with so many Americans today.....they are sick with thyroid illnesses and doctors from ancient schooling were taught it's all about TSH.
- Amen!
My favorite site is Thyroid Advocates.
Thanks Tutu. I will check out this site also.
There is also a great FB page called TAWKI (thyroid as we know it). Very helpful admins, who used to be with STTM, until a parting of ways.
Pam
-------------------- "Never, never, never, never, never give up" Winston Churchill Posts: 6489 | From Louisville, Ky | Registered: Jan 2002
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posted
Get a full blood workup, including a thyroid panel. Iron-deficiency Anemia can also cause hair loss.
Posts: 241 | From New Jersey | Registered: Jan 2015
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posted
Maybe this happens to others. When my hair gets really thin, it turns out new hair is pushing it out.
How I can tell is I hold my hair tight back from ny forehead, and feel the hairline. If there's tiny hairs there, it means new hair is growing in.
I feel my health causes my hair to stop growing for a while, and then it grows in all at once. This has happened at least a dozen times through the years.
Now that I'm older, it grows in a little thinner every time. Bummer.
Posts: 559 | From New Mexico, USA | Registered: May 2007
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posted
Don't hurry to buy a wig. Many things can cause hair loss, such as poor diet, lousy haircare routine, and stress. But, first, you just have to find the reason why you are losing your hair. Consult with a doctor, do some tests to locate the problem.
posted
My new pcp yesterday wouldn't entertain the thyroid issues ( or Lyme and Co's) and insisted I have low iron stores and my anxiety and depression could be doing this too.....gee sound familiar?
I tested low by 1 point on my iron saturation level. No sorry I will not accept the hair loss is from that.
I'm gaining too much weight and I'm freezing all the time now. I have a boat load of thyroid issues on both sides of my family.
I really think the Rifabutin did something because after I went off it these symptoms started. I know Rifabutin goes after endocrine glands. It absolutely messed up my Wbcs and liver enzymes.
What is your Abx history ?
She even said the weight gain and chronic fatigue could be from sleep apnea! Wtf!
Posts: 597 | From Massachusetts | Registered: Mar 2019
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posted
This is not the answer for many, but maybe a few will find this useful.
When a person gets older and the metabolism slows down, new skin cells don't push old cells out as quickly and thoroughly as before. It seems that it collects in the hair follicles and that prevents the hair from growing through.
There is a hair treatment product that I've used for years, when needed. The treatment gets rid of the old cells. I always have more hair grow in after using it.
I'm sure there is more than one choice with this type of treatment, but am happy to share the one that works for me (PM me). It's over the counter and not extremely expensive.
This isn't a serious medical issue like the ones being discussed in this thread, but I've had to contend with all these issues. I might as well do it with a nice head of hair.
I have to work at it, and my hair is gradually thinning out anyway, but it still looks healthy. I'll take it!
Posts: 559 | From New Mexico, USA | Registered: May 2007
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