Hair is one of the most emotional parts of aging — and one of the least talked about.
In a recent podcast conversation with Dr. Day, we unpacked something many women quietly notice:
Your hair ages too.
And no, you’re not imagining it.
You are born with a fixed number of hair follicles. That number does not change.
What does change?
Many women notice an initial shift in their 30s — and then a more significant change in their 50s and 60s around menopause.
Estrogen plays a protective role in hair growth. As estrogen declines during perimenopause and menopause, thinning can accelerate.
You can lose up to 40% of your hair before you even notice it.
In women, thinning typically appears as:
Causes can include:
Dramatic or sudden shedding deserves evaluation.
Your hair shaft is dead tissue.
Your scalp is living, aging tissue.
Signs your scalp may be contributing:
Emerging research suggests the scalp microbiome plays a role in inflammation and follicle health. Inflammation at the base of the follicle is thought to drive many hair concerns.
For many women, the issue isn’t just the hair — it’s the environment the follicle lives in.
We do not yet have strong evidence that menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) reverses hair loss.
However, starting MHT earlier in perimenopause or early menopause may help slow progression in some women by stabilizing hormonal fluctuations.
It is not a guaranteed hair-restoration strategy.
Alopecia simply means hair loss.
Topical minoxidil 2–5% (5% tends to perform best) significantly outperforms placebo for improving hair density in female pattern hair loss.
It helps stimulate hair follicles and prolong the growth phase.
Important nuances:
These treatments target the follicle — not the scalp environment.
A 2022 systematic review (Drake et al., JAMA Dermatology) examined 30 trials and found potential benefit for several branded complexes, including:
However, studies were often small and variable in quality.
Many menopausal hair formulas rely on phytoactives that influence estrogen/androgen pathways (e.g., saw palmetto, soy isoflavones, pumpkin seed oil).
Benefits appear modest and product-specific.
A small randomized controlled trial comparing topical pumpkin seed oil to 5% minoxidil found improvement in both groups over three months. Promising — but more research is needed.
Most people are not biotin deficient. It rarely improves hair unless deficiency exists.
Recent small studies using rosemary-containing blends (often combined with lavender, castor oil, or other actives) show improvements in density and shedding over 90–120 days.
However:
Evidence remains limited.
Collagen peptides and adequate protein intake may support hair structure indirectly.
Hair itself is dead — nutrition supports the follicle and scalp, not the shaft.
There are many products on the market. Some have limited evidence. Some rely heavily on branding.
Nutrafol, for example, is currently facing a class action lawsuit related to marketing claims. There are clinical studies showing reduced shedding and improved density in specific populations, but bold promises should always be viewed critically.
Discuss supplements with a clinician — especially if you have breast cancer risk or take medications.
Low-level light therapy (LLLT) is a generally safe option with moderate evidence supporting modest increases in density and thickness in pattern hair loss.
Best results occur with:
Optimal dosing parameters are still being refined.
Your scalp is living tissue. Your hair shaft is not.
Hydrating your hair will not reverse thinning. Supporting scalp health might.
Practical strategies:
Scalp health also connects to:
Over-processing and heat damage are cumulative. Balance matters.
Hair changes are a normal part of aging.
Estrogen depletion accelerates the process.
Inflammation contributes.
Genetics matter.
There is no single magic product.
Hair health — like menopause care — lives in the grey.
If you’re experiencing rapid shedding, scalp symptoms, or dramatic changes, seek medical evaluation.
Otherwise, focus on scalp health, gentle care, and realistic expectations.
Your hair is changing.
That does not mean you are failing.
—
Natalie Perkins, PhD
Founder, PAUZ Health
Host, Grab Life by the Ovaries