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There are many kinds of hair loss conditions.But the one associated with aging is almost universal. Men and women alike lose their hair over time, some more so than others.
Recent research out of Northwestern University has recently uncovered the specific mechanisms for this. As published in Nature Aging (“Escape of hair follicle stem cells causes stem cell exhaustion during aging,†4 October 2021, Rui Y, et al.) and subsequently reported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH, October 19, 2021), age-related hair loss can be tied to stem cells that leave hair follicles.
“The findings give new insight into how hair and tissues age and how some diseases associated with aging may arise,†says the NIH.
The research notes that stem cells naturally present in all humans play an important role in repair throughout the body. With time, they begin to fail at their job, which is to renew tissue and organs, a process known as stem cell exhaustion. It’s why skin sags, organs fail, eyesight fades, and just about everything else that we attribute to getting old.
This is a nascent area of research likely to expand in the coming years. But notably hair follicles are relatively easy to study, in humans and laboratory mice. Close to the surface of skin, researchers were able to look at the compartment of the hair follicle known as the bulge. They specifically looked at hair in the ears of laboratory mice, which generates new hair after the shaft of hair falls out (which hair does in all humans, all the time, even those we don’t think of as experiencing hair loss).
Under a microscope, using a long wavelength laser able to penetrate tissue, researchers were able to see stem cells escaping the hair follicle bulge. Ultimately those stem cells vanish, likely consumed by the human immune system.
So what might this mean for those whose hair has thinned, perhaps prematurely? Might these studies yield promising hair loss treatments? Research involving stem cells and hair is happening on several fronts.
Researchers in Japan are working on a hair follicle regeneration technology involving cultivated stem cells. Their work specifically aims to employ stem cells in increasing the size of hair shafts, combating miniaturization that occurs in failing hair follicles.
Other research out of an independent biomedical research institute, Sanford Burnham Prebys, employs induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC), according to the company’s 2019 press release: “Now we have a robust, highly controlled method for generating natural-looking hair that grows through the skin using an unlimited source of human iPSC-derived dermal papilla cells. This is a critical breakthrough in the development of cell-based hair-loss therapies and the regenerative medicine field.â€
So while none of this is commercially available as of early 2022, it appears some such therapies might be available in the foreseeable future. Which is one less reason to fret the ravages of time and getting older.
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