TLDR An imbalanced gut and lack of biotin can cause hair loss in mice.
In the 2017 study, researchers discovered that antibiotic-induced gut dysbiosis, specifically the overgrowth of Lactobacillus murinus, and dietary biotin deprivation led to alopecia in mice. The study involved groups of mice with sample sizes ranging from 4 to 5 per group. While biotin deprivation alone did not affect skin physiology, it did so when combined with vancomycin treatment, which increased L. murinus in the gut. This bacterium consumes biotin, leading to its depletion. Germ-free mice monocolonized with L. murinus and fed a biotin-deficient diet also developed alopecia, which was reversible with biotin supplementation. The findings indicate that gut microbiota alterations and biotin availability are linked to skin health and hair growth, with implications for understanding the relationship between gut health and skin diseases.
70 citations,
January 2009 in “Indian Journal of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprology” To manage hair loss in adult women, find the cause and treat it accordingly.
53 citations,
January 2007 in “Dermatology” Chemotherapy often causes patterned hair loss, with some scalp areas more resistant to hair loss than others.
53 citations,
March 2003 in “Journal of Investigative Dermatology” Human skin cells have a high-affinity system for biotin transport, crucial for skin health.
144 citations,
July 2002 in “Clinical and Experimental Dermatology” Telogen effluvium is a common type of hair loss that can resolve on its own or become chronic, with treatment depending on early diagnosis.
74 citations,
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2 citations,
November 2023 in “Frontiers in microbiology” The health of the gut may be important in developing new ways to prevent, diagnose, and treat alopecia areata.
40 citations,
September 2019 in “World journal of clinical cases” An elderly man's hair grew back after a treatment that transferred healthy gut bacteria.
September 2020 in “Journal of Investigative Medicine” Omics techniques are needed to understand the scalp microbiome's role in alopecia areata for new treatments.
6 citations,
December 2022 in “Cell reports” Eating a high-fat fish oil diet caused mice to lose hair due to a specific immune cell activity in the skin linked to a protein called E-FABP.
December 2022 in “Frontiers in Microbiology” The scalp microbiome is more diverse and may be more important in hair loss than the gut microbiome.