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Bouncy, shiny hair is
usually a sign of a
well-nourished person in
good overall health. Dry,
dull, and lusterless hair
often belongs to
malnourished people in poor
health.
Hair is a slender threadlike
outgrowth of protein from
the skin in mammals.
Hairs are not permanent
structures but are
continually replaced
throughout the life of a
mammal.
If hair grown is dense
profusion in some animals,
is called as fur or wool.
There are varieties of cats,
dogs, and mice bred to have
little or no visible fur. In
some species, hair is absent
at certain stages of life.
Types of Hair
Hair grows from hair
follicles deep in the
dermis. There are different
types of hair at different
stages in life, and in
different parts of the body.
Lanugo: a layer of downy,
slender hairs. Lanugo hair
grows in the third or fourth
month of fetal life and is
entirely shed either before
or shortly after birth.
Down Hair or vellus:
fine, short, unpigmented
hairs
appears during the first few
months of infancy.
Vellus grows in most places
on the human body in both
sexes except the palms of
the hands, the soles of the
feet, undersurfaces of the
fingers and toes, and a few
other places.
Terminal Hair:
Terminal hair, fully
developed hair. At puberty
Vellus hair is supplemented
by longer, coarser, more
heavily pigmented hair.
Terminal hair develops in
the armpits, genital
regions, and, in males, on
the face and sometimes on
parts of the trunk and
limbs.
The most important function
of hair in human is to
conserve body heat by
insulating against cold.
Human hair carries a central
place in human development
and sense of self. Whether
it is the gradual decrease
of hair leading to male
baldness, the loss of
pigment leading to white or
grey hairs and signalling
the onset of middle age, or
the adolescent desire for
the pubic hair that signals
approaching adulthood.
Hair Growth:
The growth and the
distribution of hair are
under the influence of the
sex hormones. The hair of
the scalp, eyebrows, and
eyelashes are of separate
type and develop fairly
early in life. There are
different types of hair
grown at different parts of
the human body.
Vellus hair appears during
the first few months of
infancy.
Vellus grows in most places
on the human body in both
sexes except the palms of
the hands, the soles of the
feet, undersurfaces of the
fingers and toes, and a few
other places.
The density of the hairs (in
hair follicles per square
centimeter) varies from
individual to individual.
In male, hair follicles
respond to androgens,
primarily testosterone and
its derivatives; the hair in
these locations can be thus
termed androgenic hair.
Increasing androgens
hormones, transforms vellus
hair into terminal hair on
several parts of the body.
Different areas on body
respond with different
sensitivities. Increasing
testosterone hormones
levels, the sequence of
appearance of androgenic
hair reflects the gradations
of androgen sensitivity. In
human pubic area is most
sensitive, so heavier hair
grows there first in
response to androgens.
Rising androgens in both
sexes, men and women,
develops terminal hair in
the pubic area and under the
arms. In contrast, normally
only men grow androgenic
hair in other areas.
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