<\/span><\/h2>\r\nYou do not know that in a complicated loop, the hair on your head, arms, face, and everywhere else on your body is continuously moving through one of four levels. <\/span><\/p>\r\nRising from under the skin, hair known as a follicle extends from a base. And it cycles through four phases from the moment each hair begins to develop to the time it falls out several years later: anagen, catagen, telogen, and oxygen.<\/span><\/p>\r\nThe development period, which will last between two and seven years, is the first phase, anagen. This stage and its period decide how long the hair gets. The catagen stage comes next, also referred to as the regression phase, which only lasts about 10 days.<\/span><\/p>\r\n The hair follicle shrinks and is removed from the dermal papilla during this time. Telogen, which lasts about three months, is the third phase. oxygen, the fourth and final step, is where the hair finally splits and falls out.<\/span><\/p>\r\nThe resting hair stays in the follicle during telogen until the development of a new anagen hair drives it out. The telogen process is the hair follicle’s sleeping phase.<\/span><\/p>\r\n This process lasts for hairs on the scalp for around 100 days and hairs on the eyebrow, eyelash, arm, and leg for much longer. <\/span>For any particular point in time, 10% of all hair is in the telogen process.<\/span><\/p>\r\nThe hair follicle is completely at rest during this process, and the club hair is fully developed. In this process, pulling a hair out will expose a solid, rough, dried, white substance at the root.<\/span><\/p>\r\nSomething that interrupts the hair growth cycle will induce the telogen process to reach more hairs. As this occurs, a few months after the hairs reach the exogenous process, a larger amount of hair will be shed. <\/span><\/p>\r\n