Dry Hair
#1
Posted 30 August 2005 - 11:57 AM
I have only gone gluten-free with food, not any beauty products.
Thanks for your input.
LauraY
#2
Posted 30 August 2005 - 01:18 PM
#3
Posted 30 August 2005 - 01:40 PM
My thyroid was checked a few years ago for another problem, and it was fine.
I don't know that much about the DH part of Celiac so wasn't sure if the dry hair was a symptom at all. Should a person with celiac disease automatically change their beauty products as well as food?
Thank for your response.
LauraY
#4
Posted 31 August 2005 - 08:52 AM
lyoung2, on Aug 30 2005, 01:40 PM, said:
My thyroid was checked a few years ago for another problem, and it was fine.
I don't know that much about the DH part of Celiac so wasn't sure if the dry hair was a symptom at all. Should a person with celiac disease automatically change their beauty products as well as food?
Thank for your response.
LauraY
Are you getting enough protein in your diet?
Dry hair - nails etc. is a lack of kerotin(sp?)
If you aren't absorbing enough protein - this
could one possibility.
been gluten-free 4 yrs.
too many food allergies to list!
#5
Posted 17 September 2005 - 03:13 PM
#6
Posted 17 September 2005 - 05:36 PM
lyoung2, on Aug 30 2005, 04:40 PM, said:
Thank for your response.
LauraY
DH is very, very nasty. If you had it you would know it. Nothing so subtle as dry hair.
#7
Posted 18 September 2005 - 07:04 AM
lyoung2, on Aug 30 2005, 02:57 PM, said:
I have only gone gluten-free with food, not any beauty products.
Thanks for your input.
LauraY
I just posted this in the Dry Skin thread, but it seems to be relevant here:
***************************************************
I was reading Dr. Whitaker's Health and Healing newsletter for this month and there was an item about supplementing with silicon in your diet. It says:
"Although you get silicon in your diet, especially from whole grains, absorption diminishes with age. The first signs of silicon deficiency are brittle hair and nails and loss of skin elasticity. That's why supplementing with the most bioavailable form of silicon, stabilized orthosilic acid, is a great way to improve your skin, hair and nails. In a recent study of 40-65 year old women with prematurely aged or sun-damaged skin, this supplement was shown to improve skin elasticity, reduce wrinkle depth, and ameliorate brittleness in nails and hair. A good brand is BioSil from Jarrow Formulas, available in health food stores..."
What caught my eye is that you get silicon from whole grains. If you're not eating whole wheat anymore, then it seems you're not getting the silicon you used to be getting and maybe that affects skin moisture [and also hair]. I don't know, it just seemed that there could be a connection in my mind.
The PhD nutritionist who diagnosed my son with celiac disease (although he has not been "formally" dx with DH, we just think that's what he has) "prescribed" Biosil for him, so he's been taking that for about a month or so. The PhD said it takes 3 months to notice results, so we're being patient.
I'd be interested in hearing other people's experiences with BioSil (or equivalent).
Carrie
#8
Posted 11 October 2005 - 06:37 PM
lyoung2, on Aug 30 2005, 12:57 PM, said:
I have only gone gluten-free with food, not any beauty products.
Thanks for your input.
LauraY
Are you taking any oil supplements (fish oil, borage oil?). My naturopath put me on those as I was starting my gluten-free diet and it did seem to help. Once my other scalp/skin problems started to recede on the gluten-free diet, I cut back the oils and my hair seems to be back to normal now.
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment."

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