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What Are The 5 Best Vitamins For Hair Growth?

Lustrous locks don’t just need the right hair care products from the outside. What you do to nourish your tresses from the inside is just as important. Which is why there’s a growing focus on ensuring diets backup the nutrition your hair needs. But there are certain vitamins more important than others when it comes to hair care. So here’s what you need to know.

1. Keep Your System Well-Oiled With Vitamin A

Vitamin A is important for keeping hair growth going like a well-oiled machine, quite literally. This nutrient is what is responsible for sebum production. Sebum is the natural oils your body produces to keep your skin and hair moisturized. Its why your hair doesn’t dry out when left to its own devices. The sebaceous glands(that produce the sebum) present near the roots of your hair, in the dermis layer of your skin, rely on a supply of fat soluble vitamin A for normal development and maintenance of their function.1 So if you want your hair to stay soft and silky be sure to include:

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2. B Vitamins For Hair Growth

Healthy hair growth needs a foundation of B vitamins. Their absence on the other hand can bring on hair fall, as research on the importance of B vitamin biotin, has found.3 A childhood B12 deficiency has also been implicated in premature graying. So stock up on B vitamin-fortified cereals, fish, eggs, meat and milk.4 B12 in particular is found in:

3. Vitamin C: Your Defence Against Aging

Vitamin C, found widely in a range of citrus fruit and other yellow and orange vegetables, spinach, tomatoes, potatoes, sweet potatoes, cauliflower, broccoli, and berries, is important for collagen production.6 7 The protein collagen in your hair shaft can help with hair growth, acting as a building block of hair itself. Besides this, the antioxidants in Vitamin C play a vital role in protecting your body from free radical damage, by neutralizing these free radicals. Without such non-enzymatic antioxidants, your hair would see progressive deterioration as cellular structures would experience damage – what we interpret as aging. The result? Graying hair and alopecia or reduced hair production.8

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4. Vitamin D

Researchers have found a connection between inadequate vitamin D intake and alopecia or hair loss. The vitamin is an important immune regulator and is also involved in cell growth and differentiation. Animal studies found that test subjects benefitted from therapeutic use of the nutrient, demonstrating its potential for promoting hair growth in those with alopecia areata linked hair fall issues. However, more research is needed to confirm the safety and effectiveness of therapeutic use of Vitamin D on human subjects for hair loss.9 You can get vitamin D in your diet through fatty fish(salmon, tuna, mackerel) or through cheese, egg yolks, and beef liver. Just as important, be sure to get some sunlight exposure every day to help your body generate this vitamin internally too.10

5. Tap Into The Protective Effects Of Vitamin E

Vitamin E, a popular ingredient in many cosmetics is invaluable for your hair too. Among other things, it protects hair from sun damage or oxidative stress, when it is exposed to harsh UV rays. One study found that Vitamin E supplementation for 8 months brought about a 34.5 percent increase in hair growth among test subjects with alopecia.11 Like Vitamin C, Vitamin E too is an antioxidant and part of your body’s defense against free radical damage, graying, and reduced hair production or alopecia.12 You’ll find this vitamin in foods like:

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The Downside Of A Vitamin Deficiency

References[+]

References
1 Everts, Helen B. “Endogenous retinoids in the hair follicle and sebaceous gland.” Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)-Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids 1821, no. 1 (2012): 222-229.
2 Vitamin A. University of Maryland Medical Center.
3 Zempleni, Janos, Yousef I. Hassan, and Subhashinee SK Wijeratne. “Biotin and biotinidase deficiency.” Expert review of endocrinology & metabolism 3, no. 6 (2008): 715-724.
4 Pandhi, Deepika, and Deepshikha Khanna. “Premature graying of hair.” Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology, and Leprology 79, no. 5 (2013): 641.
5 Vitamin B12. University of Maryland Medical Center.
6 Vitamin C. University of Maryland Medical Center.
7 Boyera, N., I. Galey, and B. A. Bernard. “Effect of vitamin C and its derivatives on collagen synthesis and cross‐linking by normal human fibroblasts.” International Journal of Cosmetic Science 20, no. 3 (1998): 151-158.
8, 12 Trueb, Ralph M. “Oxidative stress in ageing of hair.” International journal of trichology 1, no. 1 (2009): 6.
9 Kim, Dong Ha, Jin Woong Lee, In Su Kim, Sun Young Choi, Yun Young Lim, Hyeong Mi Kim, Beom Joon Kim, and Myeung Nam Kim. “Successful treatment of alopecia areata with topical calcipotriol.” Annals of dermatology 24, no. 3 (2012): 341-344.
10 Vitamin D. University of Maryland Medical Center.
11 Beoy, Lim Ai, Wong Jia Woei, and Yuen Kah Hay. “Effects of tocotrienol supplementation on hair growth in human volunteers.” Tropical life sciences research 21, no. 2 (2010): 91.
13 Vitamin E. University of Maryland Medical Center.
14 Bhat, Ramesh M., Rashmi Sharma, Anita C. Pinto, Sukumar Dandekeri, and Jacintha Martis. “Epidemiological and investigative study of premature graying of hair in higher secondary and pre-university school children.” International journal of trichology 5, no. 1 (2013): 17.
15 Trueb, Ralph M. “Pharmacologic interventions in aging hair.” Clinical interventions in aging 1, no. 2 (2006): 121.
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