Hair Regrowth After Chemotherapy: It Can Happen Sooner Than You Think

Hair Regrowth After Chemotherapy: It Can Happen Sooner Than You Think

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 Hair Regrowth After Chemotherapy: It Can Happen Sooner Than You Think


The process of chemotherapy is a rather grueling one, but it has been credited with saving many individuals from cancer. Unfortunately, chemotherapy and hair loss goes hand in hand with one another. Hair loss from chemo is one of the side effects of the treatment process that individuals fear the most. In most cases, once the treatments have ceased, growing hair after chemo becomes a simple process.


The extent of the hair loss that a person suffers from will depend upon the type and dose of medication that they receive. Chemotherapy medications attack the rapidly growing cancer cells in the human body; however, they also have a tendency to attack other rapidly growing cells in the body, like those that are responsible for hair growth.


Hair loss from chemo can occur all over the human body; however, for some individuals, it is limited to the scalp and facial region. A doctor or nurse can provide a full explanation of what an individual should expect during their chemotherapy regime. Hair regrowth after chemotherapy generally tends to begin three to six months after the treatment sessions have ended. A small percentage of former chemotherapy patients have reported that the hair that grew after their chemotherapy sessions was a different shade or texture than it was originally. Generally, hair loss from chemo begins one to three weeks after an individual has undergone the start of their treatment sessions.


Some individuals suffer from tenderness of the scalp during the time that their hair is falling out. A person can lose approximately 50% of their hair before the hair loss from chemotherapy becomes noticeable to other people. It is also possible that the growing hair after chemo may be gray in color. Often times, it can take the human body several weeks to correct its own chemical processes, including the ones that are responsible for coloring one's hair. Although chemotherapy and hair loss may seem like a dreadful ordeal to some individuals, it is important that a patient focuses upon remaining healthy, rather than what they look like. Hair loss is only a temporary side effect.


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