A balding brow

A balding browHave you noticed bald patches on your eyebrows where hair just doesn’t grow anymore? The experts weigh in on the matter. But just because we work with a slue of beauty experts, that doesn’t mean they all agree.

During a recent brow-grooming session, Sania Vucetaj, owner of Sania’s Brow Bar, carefully tweezed my brows into perfectly shaped arches. She somehow has the ability to pluck brows yet make them look even fuller – it boggles the mind. After she finished, she pointed out a small hairless patch in my right brow and told me to let the hair grow in.

‘I actually don’t pluck there – my brows just don’t grow in that spot,’ I told her.

Vucetaj asked if I applied moisturiser there and to my brows in general. Yes, I do, and it’s not by accident. I put eye cream on my brow bones (in hopes of warding off droopy skin) and smooth it over my brows to tame unruly hairs and give a little sheen. Vucetaj said this was the cause of my problems because the cream clogs the hair follicles and prevents them from growing. ‘Would you put cream along your hairline?’ she asked. Well, ew, no, I wouldn’t. Point made.

The next day I ran Vucetaj’s theory by dermatologist Ellen Marmur. She disagreed, saying that if you did indeed put moisturiser on your hairline, all you’d get were greasy roots – you wouldn’t experience hair loss. Now, if you did this and saw pimples (folliculitis), you’d know you were having a reaction and yes, this might cause some temporary shedding, but nothing permanent. The same goes for your brows, she explained.

So if parts of your brows stop growing, what’s to blame? Well, it could be the long-term consequences of plucking or waxing, since those techniques can scar the roots. But Marmur also advises women to get checked for an iron deficiency and/or thyroid problems (both natural reasons for hair loss); diet and stress can also cause a change in your brows.

‘It’s safe to use creams in that area – it’s part of the upper eyelid, and you want to treat that area to prevent hooding,’ Marmur said.

The verdict: I’ll still see Vucetaj for my brows, because she”s amazing, but I’ll also still apply my eye cream in my usual way and blame my little bald brow patch on over plucking in high school – nothing a little pencil can’t fix.

Written by Heather Muir, this article originally appeared on Allure.

Image: Inga Ivanova/Shutterstock.com

 

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22 Responses

  1. Good info on this matter i use to shave my eyebrows many moons ago, and i will regret it forever, because today my brows are so uneven, so i have to use pencils to fill it up to give it a more natural look, thanks for the article.

  2. I do Threading on my brows but I also have a few spots that just stopped growing, yet I also put eye creams on my brows!!! I’ll try checking my Iron levels but very interesting story!!

  3. Awesome advice was getting a little annoyed with my “balding” eyebrows, will look into the lack of iron too. Thank you!

  4. Thanks for the article, I actually heard the Thyriod / Hair loss symptom from a friend a few weeks ago. Very interesting!

  5. Luckily I don’t have this problem hopefully won’t in the future but its good to know what to do when it does happen.

  6. I blame my patchy look on the Vanilla Ice stage I went through! But yes, nothing a little pencil in cannot fix.

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