Learn The Secrets To Stopping Hair Loss

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Educating yourself on blading can help you come to terms with why you are losing your hair and the different ways you could use to treat it. Losing your hair can stress you out. Here are some tips to help you deal with the problem.

Living a stress free life will help you prevent thinning hair. Stress is a leading contributor to the loss of hair, and not knowing how to manage stress means continuing to experience losing hair. Learn to deal with your stress.

TIP! Vitamin C is extremely useful in stopping hair loss. It helps your body produce collagen, which in turn keeps your hair healthy and strong.

If you become ill, you need to make doubly sure to keep your body in top condition. You must follow your doctor’s orders specifically, and care for yourself very well to support your body in healing. If your body’s energy is going toward improving your health, there won’t be enough to help the hair follicles grow. That will cause the loss of hair.

While it might be hard, avoid styling products since you need to prevent losing more hair. Gels, mousse and hairsprays are filled with harsh chemicals that will damage your hair.

Changing your shower routine can reduce hair thinning. Simply blot your hair dry by wrapping your head in a soft towel instead of toweling it dry roughly. Avoid using a hair dryer. If you do use a hair dryer, use the low setting.

TIP! Hair loss can be caused by certain hair styles. Avoid keeping your hair wrapped in a band for too long, and avoid pulling your hair too tightly in any style you use.

Massaging your scalp can help with your hair thinning immensely. This helps the blood circulate in your scalp. Rub in circular motions all over your scalp for at least 5 or 10 minutes every day. This is also a relaxing thing to do, and fighting stress can be helpful for regrowing hair.

Use caution when using a hair treatment. Make sure it doesn’t get on your clothes or bedding and ruin them. If your head will be laying on anything you want to keep, make sure it is dry first.

You can find out how to get a good wig if you have lost your hair. This options is viable for both women and men.

TIP! Whilst it can be difficult to eradicate styling products from your daily hair routine, it is important that you do if you want to counteract hair loss. Products like mousse, gel, and hairspray have chemicals that can severely damage your hair causing it to fall out.

Consider your lifestyle and current events for factors that might have led to your hair loss. Your the loss of hair could be the result of starting a new medication or a major flashpoint of stress that happened in the previous twelve weeks. If you discern the specific cause of your losing hair, you might have a chance to cut it out of your life.

There are certain factors that can cause temporary hair loss, such as stress and illness. The loss of hair can begin as long as 3 months after the stressful event, and you may keep losing more hair for up to 3 months. Keep all of these specific concerns of balding in mind and use these tips to help win the battle before it begins.

The most important thing to do when you have the loss of hair is finding where it started. Your hair thinning may be linked to a new hair treatment or product. By solving these problems or getting away from a certain product, your hair may start to grow again.

TIP! Another way to prevent hair loss is by giving your scalp a gentle massage with your fingers. This will help increase scalp circulation and open blood vessels in your scalp.

Your diet is worth serious consideration when you are dealing with thinning hair. An unbalanced diet, or drastic diet changes, can upset your system and cause excessive hair shedding, especially for diets high in carbohydrates or full of fast food. Try to eat foods that have a lot of protein and are low in fat. Fish, poultry and fresh vegetables will give your hair the vitamins that you need to have long-term health.

Your hair loss may be affected by your hair style. Wearing barrettes, tight pony tails, and other constrictive devices can lead to hair loss. This kind of hair is loss is called traction alopecia.

Should your hair be disappearing, putting a wig on is a really bad idea. Wigs cause damage to hair follicles, which means they’ll cause you to go bald much more quickly. Hats, wigs and helmets shouldn’t be worn when experiencing the loss of hair in order not to speed the process.

TIP! If you are on anti-depressant medication, be careful of losing your hair. This can be caused by ingredients in the particular anti-depressant.

Determine the type of hair you have, and then find a shampoo specifically formulated for it. A great place to check your type of hair is with a hair stylist, a barber, or anyone who deals with hair. You’ll find out which type of shampoo will work best for you. To avoid build-up, always carefully and completely rinse your hair after washing.

Consider trying black strap molasses as a natural treatment. Instead of rubbing this into your scalp, you will drink it. You can drink it straight up or mixed with water. This may be hard to consume. As a result, try it in your peanut butter or coffee for a better taste.

Hair thinning can conjure up many negative feelings in any individual. Now that you are aware of some new strategies to help you deal with your blading, you are better equipped to have a happy life, whether or not you are able to halt your hair loss. Use as many tips as you need each day to receive the most benefit.

A Must-Read Book for Every Woman Hiding Beneath a Weave

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dr w A Must Read Book for Every Woman Hiding Beneath a WeaveHouston Dermatologist Seymour Weaver III, MD offers women insight into the process of diagnosing, treating, and reversing hair loss with his new book, ‘Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness.’

In his new book, Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness, Dr. Seymour Weaver asks women: What’s Under your Weave?  The answer can be shocking, and it includes thinning hair and even bald patches.  Sadly, few women know where to turn when they begin losing their hair or are even aware that hair loss is a real, medical problem and not just an issue of vanity.  Weaves can seem like the answer, but they worsen the problem; the true answer lies in Dr. Weaver’s book, a much-needed resource for women suffering from hair loss.

There are many possible causes of hair loss for women, including: scalp infection, medication, genetics, and hair styling.  Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide demystifies the process of turning to a doctor for answers to this problem, providing a detailed account of what women can expect once they seek help, from their first hair loss evaluation appointment to diagnosis and treatment.  Dr. Weaver is an expert in his field with over thirty years in practice and helps women understand that, while covering up their scalp seems like the answer, it is merely a superficial solution for a medical problem.

 

Facing what’s under the weave can be a difficult and terrifying experience, but it is nothing compared to the shameful and irreversible baldness that can result from continuing to use weaves as a solution.  The sooner women seek medical treatment for hair loss, the sooner they can start on the road to re-growth and, ultimately, recovery.

 

Dr. Seymour Weaver

 

 

Dr. Seymour Weaver is board-certified in dermatology and a member of many medical organizations (American Academy of Dermatology, American Medical Association, American Society of Dermatologic Surgery, American Society for Liposuction Surgery, Houston Dermatological Society, National Medical Association, Texas Dermatological Society, Texas Medical Association) and is specifically recognized for his expertise in anti-aging dermatology, treating hair loss and scalp disorders, dermatological laser procedures with capabilities to treat skin of every color, and surgical and non-surgical body-shaping procedures.

 

He received his medical degree from Baylor College of Medicine. He completed a medical internship at Los Angeles County/USC medical center and dermatology training at Martin Luther King, Jr. Medical Center in Los Angeles. He also studied tropical dermatology in Nairobi, Kenya at the Kenyatta National Hospital.

 

For more information, please visit http://www.drwdermatology.com/ and http://BlackHairLossGuide.com.

“Like” Dr. Seymour Weaver on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaver and https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaversBlackHairLossGuide.

Follow Dr. Seymour Weaver on Twitter @DrSeymourWeaver and @BlackHairLossDr

 

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For media inquiries or to request an interview, please contact:

Dr. Seymour Weaver

drweaver@drseymourweaver.com

281.395.7770

Hair Loss: A Growing Affliction amongst Young Women

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252 1024x682 Hair Loss: A Growing Affliction amongst Young Women

Many young women who use weaves don’t realize they could be causing irreversible damage. In his new book, ‘Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness’, Seymour Weaver III, MD works to inform young women that they are not immune to the plague of permanent baldness.

Weaves are prevalent amongst women all ages and, in recent years, amongst women of all races. This is understandable: many women love the look weaves offer their hair. However, young women who have used a weave since their childhood or early teens soon find out the unsavory truth about weaves.

 

In Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness, Seymour Weaver III, MD discusses the lasting damage a weave can cause for women and their hair. While a weave can make a woman’s hair look great in the short term, in the long run, they can cause hair thinning that may become irreversible. Women as young as eighteen years old can suffer the permanent loss of as much as half their hair if they ignore the signs and continue to wear a weave.

Thinning hair and baldness are becoming more and more pervasive amongst young women; however, a woman who is treated earlier for hair loss has a much greater chance of keeping her hair over her entire lifetime. Dr. Weaver urges all women to seek treatment for preventable baldness, and he stresses the importance of doing so at every age. Young women are not immune to this problem and, in fact, will suffer the consequences longer if their hair loss goes untreated.

Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide arms women with the information they need to face their hair loss and seek real help for it. Dr. Weaver stresses that for many women, baldness is preventable and that early diagnosis and early prevention are the key to keeping women and their hair together for life.

 

Dr. Seymour Weaver

 

 

Dr. Seymour Weaver is board-certified in dermatology and a member of many medical organizations (American Academy of Dermatology, American Medical Association, American Society of Dermatologic Surgery, American Society for Liposuction Surgery, Houston Dermatological Society, National Medical Association, Texas Dermatological Society, Texas Medical Association) and is specifically recognized for his expertise in anti-aging dermatology, treating hair loss and scalp disorders, dermatological laser procedures with capabilities to treat skin of every color, and surgical and non-surgical body-shaping procedures.

 

He received his medical degree from Baylor College of Medicine. He completed a medical internship at Los Angeles County/USC medical center and dermatology training at Martin Luther King, Jr. Medical Center in Los Angeles. He also studied tropical dermatology in Nairobi, Kenya at the Kenyatta National Hospital.

 

For more information, please visit http://www.drwdermatology.com/and http://BlackHairLossGuide.com.

“Like” Dr. Seymour Weaver on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaver and https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaversBlackHairLossGuide.

Follow Dr. Seymour Weaver on Twitter @DrSeymourWeaver and @BlackHairLossDr

 

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For media inquiries or to request an interview, please contact:

Dr. Seymour Weaver

drweaver@drseymourweaver.com

281.395.7770

Damaging Distance: the Need for the Hair Styling and the Medical Communities to Come Together

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022 682x1024 Damaging Distance: the Need for the Hair Styling and the Medical Communities to Come Together

In his new book, ‘Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide,” Seymour Weaver III, MD urges for increased collaboration between doctors and hairstylists. Many women suffering from hair loss don’t seek a doctor’s help until it is too late; hair stylists can be the first line of defense to save women’s hair.

Many people who experience hair loss suffer in silence, especially if they are women. Hair loss is much more than a vanity issue; it is a real, medical issue that requires treatment before it can be resolved. Since hair stylists are often the first to notice a client’s hair loss, Seymour Weaver III, MD emphasizes the importance of creating a dialogue between hair stylists and medical professionals in his new book, Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness. Beginning this conversation is a key step in the fight to save women’s hair.

Hairstylists have a unique perspective on the health of their clients’ hair, because they generally see their clients far more often than a doctor sees them. Therefore, stylists are often the first to spot thinning hair—a simple fact that makes the hair styling community a crucial player in the fight to, ultimately, keep women from losing their hair. Sadly, many hair stylists don’t have the medical background or knowledge to encourage their clients to seek out medical treatment before it is too late; and, for that, many women bear the great burden of permanent hair loss.

Dr. Weaver works to close the existing gap between hairstylists and medical professionals. His book is a catalyst for the new and important relationship between doctors and hair care professionals; he begins the dialogue by providing both parties with the information they need regarding causes, diagnosis, and treatment of hair loss. By putting hair stylists on guard against hair loss, Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide ultimately helps more women avoid permanent baldness and happily keep their hair.

 

Dr. Seymour Weaver

Dr. Seymour Weaver is board certified in dermatology and a member of many medical organizations (American Academy of Dermatology, American Medical Association, American Society of Dermatologic Surgery, American Society for Liposuction Surgery, Houston Dermatological Society, National Medical Association, Texas Dermatological Society, Texas Medical Association) and is specifically recognized for his expertise in anti-aging dermatology, treating hair loss and scalp disorders, dermatological laser procedures with capabilities to treat skin of every color, and surgical and non-surgical body shaping procedures.

 

He received his medical degree from Baylor College of Medicine. He completed a medical internship at Los Angeles County/USC medical center and dermatology training at Martin Luther King, Jr. Medical Center in Los Angeles. He also studied tropical dermatology in Nairobi, Kenya at the Kenyatta National Hospital.

 

For more information, please visit http://www.drwdermatology.com/and http://BlackHairLossGuide.com.

“Like” Dr. Seymour Weaver on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaver and https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaversBlackHairLossGuide.

Follow Dr. Seymour Weaver on Twitter @DrSeymourWeaver and @BlackHairLossDr

The Hair Loss Woes of the World’s Top Tennis Player

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dr w 300x199  The Hair Loss Woes of the World’s Top Tennis Player

Serena Williams is the number one female tennis player in the world and reportedly suffers from hair loss. Seymour Weaver III, MD provides a resource for help in his new book, ‘Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness.’

The Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) issued the latest top ten rankings for women’s tennis recently, and, to no one’s surprise, Serena Williams remained in the top spot, a fact due, in no small part, to her winning her fifth U.S. Open title this year. However, as amazing as Serena Williams’ life may seem, she must endure hair loss and it’s many side effects. Williams, whose many hairstyles may outnumber her tennis wins, can, likely, blame damaging hair styling methods for her affliction.

In his new book, Dr. Weaver’s Black Hair Loss Guide: How to Stop Thinning Hair and Avoid Permanent Baldness, Seymour Weaver III, MD, discusses what women with hair loss can do to save their hair. With over 30 years of experience to his credit, Dr. Weaver stresses the importance or early diagnosis and early prevention as the key to keeping women from permanent baldness. Unfortunately, many women are tempted to continue to wear weaves once their hair has started thinning, aided by the idea that many celebrities do it, too.
Despite its perception as a vanity issue, hair loss is a medical issue that must be treated by a doctor. Dr. Weaver opens up a discussion about what women can expect once they seek help—from the first appointment to the diagnosis and treatment—that can—unlike yet another weave—truly cure hair loss. Serena Williams may be a strong female role model, but women should think twice before they let their desire to emulate her extend to choices that could endanger their hair.

Dr. Seymour Weaver

Dr. Seymour Weaver is board-certified in dermatology and a member of many medical organizations (American Academy of Dermatology, American Medical Association, American Society of Dermatologic Surgery, American Society for Liposuction Surgery, Houston Dermatological Society, National Medical Association, Texas Dermatological Society, Texas Medical Association) and is specifically recognized for his expertise in anti-aging dermatology, treating hair loss and scalp disorders, dermatological laser procedures with capabilities to treat skin of every color, and surgical and non-surgical body-shaping procedures.

He received his medical degree from Baylor College of Medicine. He completed a medical internship at Los Angeles County/USC medical center and dermatology training at Martin Luther King, Jr. Medical Center in Los Angeles. He also studied tropical dermatology in Nairobi, Kenya at the Kenyatta National Hospital.

For more information, please visit http://www.drwdermatology.com/ and http://BlackHairLossGuide.com.
“Like” Dr. Seymour Weaver on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaver and https://www.facebook.com/DrSeymourWeaversBlackHairLossGuide.
Follow Dr. Seymour Weaver on Twitter @DrSeymourWeaver and @BlackHairLossDr

###

For media inquiries or to request an interview, please contact:

Dr. Seymour Weaver

drweaver@drseymourweaver.com

281.395.7770

 

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