Solutions For Unwanted Facial Hair

The menopause can cause a change in hair growth, but getting hormone balance right and some simple tips can help.

 

Along with the hot flushes and unwanted weight gain can also come a change in your facial and head hair.

Ironically your eyebrows get thinner, due to falling oestrogen levels and raised androgens and low progesterone around the menopause, but you also start growing hair.

Unfortunately it is not long, glossy and on your head, but tends to be of the strong, wiry type on your chin or upper lip and that is more difficult to deal with.

What causes it?

We are back to our old friend hormone balance as it is related to oestrogen dominance, the decline of progesterone and the rise in production of male hormones known as androgens like testosterone.

These stimulate facial hair growth, especially on the chin, and there is also a genetic component if there is a previous history of this in the women in your family.

An increase in facial hair is common at Menopause when hormone imbalance is common, but it can also be related to contraceptive pill use and conditions such as PCOS.

Treatment options

The first sight of a hair sends most of us straight to the tweezers or to a beautician for electrolysis. Certainly the occasional one can be plucked and despite the old wives tales, it won’t grow back any thicker.

For most of us the first thought to just get rid of it and there are a number of options for this.

Basically if you are starting to have a number of wiry hairs on your face you may want to think about waxing, depilation or epilators or for a long-lasting solution laser treatment is effective.

However it can take from 4-19 treatments so isn’t a cheap option, and not suitable for women whose facial hair is grey or white as the laser can’t identify those hairs.

IN that case electrolysis will be better for you, but it can be uncomfortable and again will need a number of treatments – make sure with both laser and electrolysis that you find a properly trained practitioner and a certified clinic.

If you are also seeing hair growth from your ears, which is less common, it is vital that you never try to pluck those hairs. You can damage the delicate ear canal by causing small nicks that lead to infection, so use grooming scissors with rounded tips or a trimmer with a nose and ear hair attachment.

4 ways to deal with it more naturally

Virtually all women have some fine, hardly visible fine hair on their faces but at menopause it suddenly seems to be much more prominent and in places we may never have seen it before, but there are some simple ways to tackle it.

1. Fluctuating hormones are often the cause so ensuring you have got that right is the certainly the first step. Oestrogen dominance has a number of effects so rebalancing will help with your other menopausal symptoms as well.

2. A diet that is low in white carbohydrates (such as white bread/pasta/flour products) can help to prevent unwanted hair growth. This is because high glycaemic foods such as white flour products raise blood sugar, which in turn increases insulin levels.

Raised insulin is responsible for the production of too many androgens, and they are behind the facial hair growth. A low-GI diet is healthy in many ways and can also help lose weight.

3. Low tech solutions are either to use cold wax strips as these are gentler on the skin than hot wax exfoliation, or bleaching the hairs so they are less noticeable.

4. Drinking spearmint tea twice a day can help too as it reduces androgens and so leads to less hair growth because of its testosterone-inhibiting qualities,

BUT don’t substitute peppermint tea or oil as that has the reverse effect and can encourage hair growth. .

Helpful information:

If hormone imbalance is behind your facial hair, then you must address that first by checking for symptoms of oestrogen dominance and increased testosterone production – both of which are common at menopause.

Rebalancing with bioidentical natural progesterone will help reduce the androgen production but remember that there may also be a genetic predisposition as well.

Not sure if you are oestrogen dominant or not? This article can help you identify the signs.

https://anna.blog.wellsprings-health.com/what-signs-of-oestrogen-dominance-do-you-have-3/ 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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