It’s actually not uncommon for your hair to come back differently post-chemo, says
, an assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology at Michigan State University. But, while it happens often enough, experts don’t really know why.“The chemo drugs settle into the hair follicles, arresting growth,” Alan explains. The change in a patient’s hair could be due to a direct impact from chemo drugs on the hair follicles, or the drug could cause changes in the genes that control hair texture and color, she says.Jack Jacoub, M.D.
, a medical oncologist and medical director of MemorialCare Cancer Institute at Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, Calif. He’s even had older patients who had grey hair that grew back darker after chemotherapy. “Hair changes are one of the most interesting things to see as people get through their treatment,” he says.
For some people, their hair will return back to its “normal” state with time. For others, it won’t. Either way, it looks like Blair is embracing the journey with a sense of humor. “I have a passing resemblance to one of the #jonasbrothers,” she wrote in another recent post. “I mean, it is a car selfie, but which brother? I like this look.”
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