Hair turns gray as melanocytes—the cells that generate melanin, which gives hair (and skin) its coloration—deteriorate because of age, environment, or disease. Hair doesn’t gray uniformly: it may gray on some parts of the body earlier than on other parts. The age one goes gray is determined in part by genetics, but environmental factors—smoking, for example—and such conditions as autoimmune disease, heart disease, and thyroid disease have been associated with hair that turns gray early in a person’s life. What’s more, scientists have also found evidence to suggest that psychological stress is, in fact, linked with hair graying.
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Why Does Hair Turn Gray?
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