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i dye my hair black from time to time to make it blacker, but is it true that dyeing can cause white hair?

2006-08-30 12:54:45 · 5 answers · asked by Inquirer 5 in Beauty & Style Hair

please excuse if i mispelled something. just please give me info. thanks!

2006-08-30 12:55:35 · update #1

5 answers

No, White hair occurs when the pigment (= color) cell attached to the hair follicle, dies, or goes dormant. The hair folicle produces the hair shaft.
. Hair dying treats the hair shaft which is dead. It is composed of a series of scales made of a chemical called keratin. The dye particles lodge in the area between the scales. Ammonia chemicals are often added to the dye chemical mix. It separates the scales even more to help the dye particles to more easily lodge them and in greater amounts
Hair dying chemicals can hair when they are used too often or when several producrs are used together which they are not designed to do.
The damaged hair will grow back and with color if it had color to begin with.
Dan.

2006-08-30 13:03:13 · answer #1 · answered by Dan S 6 · 0 0

Not that I know of...If you dye your hair to much, it will become damaged....but I don't think it should turn white. But your hair will turn gray or white later on in life anyway, but it shouldn't make it turn gray or white any sooner. Hope i helped!

2006-08-30 20:01:30 · answer #2 · answered by ~Nicole~ 3 · 0 0

Hair is nothing more than dead cells. Dying it will not cause the new dead cells to change color. It's genetics.

2006-08-30 20:01:37 · answer #3 · answered by DefenseEngineer 4 · 0 0

no genetics causes white hair

2006-08-30 19:57:15 · answer #4 · answered by NyteWing 5 · 0 0

Of course it will. The same way as people who eat carrots will die. Everyone who ever ate carrots died or will die.

2006-08-30 20:19:22 · answer #5 · answered by flugelberry 4 · 1 0

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