Hair
Growth Cycle
Hair
on the scalp grows about .3-.4 mm/day or about 6 inches
per year. Unlike other mammals, hair growth and loss
is random and not seasonal or cyclic. At any given time,
a random number of hairs will be in various stages of
growth and shedding. There are three stages of hair
growth: catagen, telogen, and anagen.
Catagen -
The catagen phase is a transitional stage and 3% of
all hairs are in this phase at any time. This phase
lasts for about 2-3 weeks. During this time growth stops
and the outer root sheath shrinks and attaches to the
root of the hair. This is the formation of what is known
as a club hair.
Telogen -
Telogen is the resting phase and accounts for 10-15%
of all hairs. This phase lasts for about 100 days for
hairs on the scalp and much longer for hairs on the
eyebrow, eyelash, arm and leg. During this phase the
hair follicle is completely at rest and the club hair
is completely formed. Pulling out a hair in this phase
will reveal a solid, hard, dry, white material at the
root. About 25-100 telogen hairs are shed normally each
day.
Anagen
-
Anagen is the active phase of the hair. The cells in
the root of the hair are dividing rapidly. A new hair
is formed and pushes the club hair up the follicle and
eventually out. During this phase the hair grows about
1 cm every 28 days. Scalp hair stays in this active
phase of growth for 2-6 years. Some people have difficulty
growing their hair beyond a certain length because they
have a short active phase of growth. On the other hand,
people with very long hair have a long active phase
of growth. The hair on the arms, legs, eyelashes, and
eyebrows have a very short active growth phase of about
30-45 days explaining why they are so much shorter than
scalp hair.
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