Hair Labs
Hair greying is usually treated as one-way: once a follicle stops producing pigment, colour is assumed to be gone for good.But a study from Columbia University introduced a way to test that assumption — by treating individual hair strands as approximate biological timelines. Because scalp hair grows at a relatively consistent rate, different segments along a single strand correspond to different periods in the recent past. By analysing pigmentation along the length of individual hairs, the researchers reconstructed how pigment output changed over time. Some follicles followed the expected path: dark hair transitioning to grey, with no return. Others showed a different pattern — a grey segment followed by a darker one on the same strand.This does not mean the hair fibre recoloured. Instead, it indicates that the follicle temporarily lost pigment production and later restarted it while the hair was still growing. These findings suggest that greying can behave as a dynamic process, influenced by cumulative biological and psychological stress, rather than a strictly irreversible failure. In some follicles — at least for a limited period — pigment production can restart.
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