Hair Growth Unlocked: Q&A with Simone Abaron
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Q: Hair fall can feel completely random. As a trichologist and naturopath, what are the most common root causes you see behind general shedding and sudden hair thinning at the crown?
Simone: Shedding rarely just happens out of nowhere. There's almost always a trigger. In most cases, it comes back to one of three things. Hormonal shifts are one of the biggest culprits; fluctuations in androgens, thyroid hormones, or postpartum changes can shorten the hair growth phase before you've even noticed anything. Nutritional deficiencies are another major factor. Low iron, vitamin D, zinc, or not enough protein in the diet can quietly push follicles into shedding mode. And then there are environmental stressors including UV exposure, pollution, scalp inflammation, and product buildup that can all disrupt the follicle and increase hair fall.
Q: Hormonal shifts often show up in our hair first. What is happening biologically during postpartum hair loss, or perimenopause and menopause hair thinning?
Simone: Hair follicles are incredibly responsive to hormonal changes, sometimes more so than any other part of the body. Postpartum shedding happens when oestrogen drops after pregnancy, which pushes a large number of hairs into the shedding phase at the same time. It can feel sudden and dramatic, but it's a normal biological response. During perimenopause and menopause, it's a slower process. Declining oestrogen gradually shortens the growth cycle, which leads to finer, less dense hair over time.
Q: We know stress wreaks havoc on the body, but how exactly does a spike in cortisol disrupt the hair growth cycle and trigger sudden stress hair loss?
Simone: Hair follicles are genuinely sensitive to stress hormones. When cortisol spikes, whether from physical or emotional stress, the body essentially redirects its resources away from non-essential functions, and hair growth falls into that category. A large number of follicles can shift out of the active growth phase and into a resting phase at the same time. The catch is that you won't see it straight away. Those hairs shed around two to three months later in what's known as telogen effluvium, which is why the connection to the original stressor isn't always obvious.
Q: How do UV exposure, saltwater, and chlorine impact the scalp barrier and hair fibre, and can repeated exposure accelerate thinning?
Simone: Each one causes a different type of damage, but the cumulative effect can be significant. UV radiation creates oxidative stress that weakens keratin and damages the scalp barrier. Saltwater dehydrates the hair fibre and lifts the cuticle, making it much more prone to breakage. Chlorine strips the protective lipid layer from both the scalp and the hair shaft. On their own, occasional exposure is manageable, but repeated and combined, they increase dryness, breakage, and scalp irritation. For anyone already prone to thinning, that chronic scalp inflammation can genuinely accelerate the process.
Q: Hair loss isn’t the same for men and women. How do the patterns, underlying causes, and treatment approaches differ?
Simone: The patterns are quite different. Men typically see a receding hairline and crown thinning, which is largely driven by sensitivity to DHT. Women tend to experience more diffuse thinning through the part and crown, usually keeping the frontal hairline intact. That said, many of the underlying biological processes are shared. Supporting follicle health, extending the growth phase, improving scalp circulation, and addressing nutritional gaps are all relevant regardless of gender. That's where both internal and topical support can work really well together, creating the right conditions for stronger growth and less shedding.
Q: From a nutrition standpoint, which deficiencies most commonly contribute to shedding or reduced density?
Simone: The most common deficiencies linked to hair shedding include: iron, particularly low ferritin levels, protein, essential for keratin production, as well as zinc and B vitamins, which support follicle metabolism. Correcting these deficiencies often improves shedding and overall hair density.
Q: Australia’s hot summers and dry winters can be harsh. How do seasonal changes affect the scalp microbiome and inflammation levels?
Simone: Seasonal changes influence oil production and microbial balance. Hot weather increases sweat and sebum, which can encourage yeast growth and scalp irritation. Dry winter air reduces moisture in the scalp barrier, leading to flaking and sensitivity. Both situations can increase inflammation around the follicle, which affects healthy hair growth.
Q: For active people who sweat and train frequently, does scalp inflammation or poor circulation influence hair growth cycles?
Simone: Yes, both matter. Exercise increases blood flow, which supports nutrient delivery to the follicle. The issue arises when sweat, salt, and product buildup stay on the scalp for long periods. This can irritate the follicle and increase inflammation. Regular cleansing and scalp care help maintain a healthy growth environment.
Q: When people look for the best hair supplements, which specific botanicals, vitamins, or peptides actually have clinical backing to stop breakage, shedding and encourage growth and thickness?
Simone: Several nutrients have solid clinical research behind them and these usually fall into 3 categories: Follicle nutrition, structural health and growth cycle regulation. Nutrients such as iron, biotin, zinc and specific amino acids help support healthy follicle function and keratin production, both of which are essential for strong, growing hair. Certain botanical extracts and bioactive compounds including horsetail and betacarotene support follicle activity and improve the environment around the hair root. Finally, collagen-supporting nutrients such as ascorbic acid (vitamin C) help strengthen the connective tissue that supports the follicle, contributing to thicker, more resilient hair.
Q: If someone starts noticing thinning or shedding, what does an effective, daily scalp care routine for hair growth look like?
Simone: A holistic approach addresses both internal and external factors. Start by reviewing nutrition, iron levels, B vitamins, protein intake, and hormonal health. Support the scalp with regular cleansing and exfoliation to reduce inflammation and buildup. Introduce a targeted scalp treatment such as Mane Event Elixir® to stimulate follicle activity, extend the growth phase and support thicker, stronger hair with less shedding. Healthy hair growth depends on supporting both follicle health and hair strand protection from the inside out.
Q: The BeautyWorks The Scalp Health Edit bundle is built on a 3-step framework, ingestible support (Apotecari Mane Event® capsules), regular scalp exfoliation (Christophe Robin Cleansing Purifying Scalp Scrub), and a targeted topical serum (Apotecari Mane Event Elixir®). Can you explain how this specific combination works as a holistic treatment programme and why it’s such an effective way to restore density?
Simone: The Scalp Health Edit bundle was designed around one principle: that the right steps, in the right order, produce results that no single product can match. Think of the first two steps as preparation. Ingestible support fills the internal nutritional gaps that affect follicle health. Scalp exfoliation clears buildup, calms inflammation, and rebalances the scalp environment. Both prime the scalp for what comes next. Then Mane Event Elixir® goes to work, delivering targeted actives directly to the follicle with nothing in the way.
Q: What is a realistic timeline for seeing less shedding, and when do the new baby hairs actually start to appear once you begin a holistic hair care routine like this?
Simone: With a layered approach, supporting the follicle from within through targeted nutrition, stimulating the scalp with a topical serum, and maintaining a healthy scalp environment with regular exfoliation, many people begin to notice less shedding within a few weeks. Visible signs of new growth, such as baby hairs along the hairline or part, typically begin to appear around 8–12 weeks, which aligns with the natural hair growth cycle.