Hair Thinning in Perimenopause: GHK-Cu and Follicle Signaling Research

Introduction
Hair thinning is one of the most emotional and visible changes women experience during perimenopause.

Research suggests it is often tied to changes in follicle signaling, stress pathways, and cellular support systems.


What Controls Hair Growth

Hair growth depends on:

  • Follicle cycle signaling
  • Nutrient delivery
  • Cellular regeneration
  • Stress response

What Changes During Perimenopause

Research discussions include:

  • Shortened growth phase
  • Increased shedding cycles
  • Reduced follicle support

Where Peptide Research Comes In

GHK-Cu (Copper Peptide)

Studied for:

  • Tissue remodeling
  • Collagen and structural protein signaling
  • Hair follicle environment support

BPC-157 (indirect research interest)

Explored for:

  • Tissue-level signaling
  • Circulation-related pathways

Why This Matters

Hair changes often reflect:

  • Internal signaling shifts
  • Stress and recovery imbalance

Bottom Line

Hair thinning during perimenopause is often driven by:

  • Follicle signaling changes
  • Reduced cellular support
  • Stress-related pathways

Peptide research is exploring how these systems interact.


Disclaimer

Mile High Peptides LLC provides research materials intended for laboratory and educational use only. Not for human consumption.

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