04/27/2026
Most women notice increased hair shedding in spring and assume something's wrong now. But hair doesn't work on a same-day timeline.
Hair grows in cycles.
When thyroid function drops or stress increases (even briefly) it pushes follicles into the resting phase of the growth cycle. Those hairs don't shed immediately. They wait.
Winter brings metabolic shifts: less sunlight, more stress, hormonal changes that can suppress thyroid function and increase cortisol.
Your body attempts to adapt and your hair follicles respond by going dormant.
So when you notice increased shedding in the spring, the disruption likely happened in the winter.
This is why hair loss feels can feel so confusing. You're looking for answers in the present while the cause may have originated in the past.
We map the timeline through symptom patterns, stress load, hormone levels, and metabolic shifts over months, not days—so we can identify what actually triggered the shedding and prevent the next cycle.
Your hair tells a story. We help you read it.
☑️ Ready for hair that doesn't break every time you run your fingers through it? We'll help you get there
📲 Follow for hormone insights that make sense of what your body's doing
💻 viphealthtx.com
☎ 936-639-1005