Better Eating = better hair (yahoo article)

Relient2

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I thought this was pretty interesting. So zinc plays a role in hair loss? Or is this article bogus.

Tips For Better Eating
Try This 4-Step Diet for Your Hair
Posted by Joy Bauer, M.S., R.D., C.D.N. on Wed, Feb 21, 2007, 9:26 am PST
Put your hair on a four-step diet and reap the benefits with stronger, more lustrous locks!

Step 1: Eat plenty of iron-rich protein
Protein is necessary for all cell growth, including hair cells. And the iron found within certain protein foods helps your red blood cells carry oxygen to all cells in the body, including the hair follicles.

Good sources of iron-rich protein include clams, oysters, lean beef, turkey, duck, lamb, chicken, pork, shrimp, and eggs.

Good sources of vegetarian iron-rich protein include tofu, soybeans, lentils, beans, and black-eyed peas.

Step 2: Load up on Vitamin C
Vitamin C improves the body's ability to absorb non-heme iron (also known as vegetarian-based iron), so vegetarians should eat iron-rich vegetables and foods rich in vitamin C at the same meal.

Good sources of Vitamin C include guava, peppers, oranges, grapefruit, strawberries, pineapple, papayas, lemons, broccoli, kale, and Brussels sprouts.

Step 3: Be sure to get your Bs (folate, vitamin B-6, vitamin B-12)
These vitamins are involved in the creation of red blood cells, which carry oxygen and nutrients to all body cells, including those of the scalp, follicles, and growing hair. Without enough B vitamins, the cells will not thrive, causing shedding, slow growth, or weak hair that is prone to breaking.

Good sources of vitamin B-6 include fortified whole-grain breakfast cereals, garbanzo beans, wild salmon, lean beef, pork tenderloin, chicken breast, white potatoes (w/skin), bananas, and lentils.

Good sources of Vitamin B-12 include shellfish (clams, oysters, crab), wild salmon, fortified whole-grain breakfast cereal, soy milk, trout, lean beef, and low-fat cottage cheese.

Good sources of folate include fortified whole-grain breakfast cereals, lentils, black-eyed peas, soybeans, oatmeal, turnip greens, spinach, green peas, artichokes, okra, beets, parsnips, and broccoli.

Step 4: Don't forget the Zinc
The mineral zinc is involved in tissue growth and repair, including hair growth. It also helps keep the oil glands around the hair follicles working properly. Low levels of zinc can cause hair loss, slow growth, and dandruff.

Good sources of zinc include oysters, lean beef, crab, ostrich, pork tenderloin, peanut butter, wheat germ, turkey, veal, pumpkin seeds, chicken, and chickpeas.
 

CCS

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zink is used to make SOD. By itself it is no good on your hair.
 

Relient2

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yah I remeber for my blood test they said I had very low levels of zinc so reading that article, the zinc, and the hairloss all happening around same time made me thing if that had a factor. But im dumb and prob wrong who knows
 

s.a.f

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Dont think that vitimins and supplements will help against m.p.b.
 

Sean68

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just a decent vitamin tablet and fairly healthy diet should be enough. i think most people on here do that anyway.
 

s.a.f

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Jm0311 said:
how do you know that? it could help...very minimal though.

:roll: Because m.p.b is like 99% genetics just look at all the starving people in the third world with thick hair or the street junkies in this country. Whilst many fitness fanatics and other health freaks also go bald.
Good diet and health may slightly effect the condition of your hair but wont change a thing as far as m.p.b goes. If you're destined to lose it the only hope is with proper treatments.
 

blueshard

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i think that diet can absolutely play a role in how fast you lose you hair.

health freaks are not always eating a diet that is good for hair.
 
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