Hair
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How to Tell If Your Hair Loss Is Thyroid or Traction
Thyroid hair loss and traction alopecia look similar but need different fixes. Here is how to tell them apart and what to do next.
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Two Different Clocks: FPHL vs Traction Alopecia Timelines
Female pattern hair loss and traction alopecia look similar but have different causes and timelines. Learn how to tell them apart and what to do next.
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Female Pattern Hair Loss Isn't Just Genetics (Here's What's Really Going On)
Female pattern hair loss has more causes than most women are told. A veteran stylist breaks down the real science, the overlooked triggers, and what you can do.
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What Is Female Pattern Hair Loss, Really?
Female pattern hair loss causes gradual thinning at the crown and part line. Here's what's actually happening in your follicles and what you can do.
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I Thought My Edges Were Gone Forever. I Was Wrong About Why.
Telogen effluvium and traction alopecia look similar but have different causes and fixes. Here is how to tell them apart and what to do next.
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I Lost Half My Hair in 3 Months. Here's What Was Actually Happening
Telogen effluvium sends your hair into sudden mass shedding. Here's what triggers it, how long it lasts, and what you can do right now.
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Your Hair Is Shedding More Than Usual. Here Is What That Means
Sudden excessive shedding is often telogen effluvium. Learn the early signs, what triggers it, and what you can actually do to get your hair back.
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Early Signs of CCCA: What Most People Get Wrong
Learn the early warning signs of CCCA, why it's so often missed, and what you can actually do about it before scarring sets in.
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What Causes Central Centrifugal Cicatricial Alopecia?
CCCA is a scarring hair loss condition that disproportionately affects Black women. Learn what causes it, who's at risk, and what you can do about it.
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What Causes CCCA Hair Loss?
CCCA destroys hair follicles from the crown outward. Learn what actually causes it, who is most at risk, and what you can do about it.
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Alopecia Areata Is Not Just Stress: What Actually Causes It
Alopecia areata is an autoimmune condition, not a styling problem. Here's what's really behind those sudden bald patches and what it means for your edges.
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I Thought My Edges Were Gone for Good. Then I Learned the Real Reason Why.
Traction alopecia isn't always the cause of thinning edges. Anemia, thyroid issues, lupus, and other health conditions can trigger hair loss too.
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