Les meilleures vitamines et minéraux pour la croissance des cheveux (revue fondée sur les preuves)
Réponse rapide: La carence en fer (Iron Deficiency) est la cause nutritionnelle la plus fréquente de chute de cheveux. Nutriments ayant un impact démontré : 1) Fer — une ferritine <30ng/mL est significativement associée à l'alopécie ; il est recommandé de supplémenter jusqu'à atteindre une ferritine >70ng/mL ; 2) Vitamine D — la carence est associée à la pelade et à l'alopécie féminine ; maintenir des taux sériques de 40-60ng/mL ; 3) Zinc — la carence provoque la chute ; la supplémentation l'améliore (15-30mg/jour) ; 4) Biotine (B7) — efficace uniquement en cas de carence (voir article biotine) ; 5) Vitamine B12 et acide folique — la carence affecte les globules rouges et l'apport en oxygène aux follicules. Avec quelques preuves : vitamine C (favorise l'absorption du fer et la synthèse du collagène), acides gras oméga-3 (réduisent l'inflammation du cuir chevelu), vitamine E (protection antioxydante des follicules). Avertissement important : en l'absence de carence nutritionnelle, supplémenter en vitamines ne stimule pas la pousse des cheveux ; l'excès de certains nutriments (comme vitamine A >10 000 UI/jour, sélénium >400mcg/jour) peut au contraire provoquer une chute. Il est recommandé de faire un bilan avant de supplémenter.
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Which Nutrient Deficiencies Cause Hair Loss?
Nutritional deficiencies can cause or worsen hair loss, but the key principle is that supplementation only helps if you are actually deficient. A 2019 comprehensive review in Dermatology and Therapy identified the following deficiencies as most strongly linked to hair loss:
- Iron: The most common nutritional cause of hair loss. Ferritin (iron storage) levels below 30 ng/mL are associated with increased telogen effluvium. Some dermatologists target ferritin levels of 70+ ng/mL for optimal hair growth. Women of reproductive age are most commonly affected.
- Vitamin D: Receptors for vitamin D are present on hair follicles. Levels below 30 ng/mL have been associated with alopecia areata, telogen effluvium, and female pattern hair loss. A 2019 meta-analysis found significantly lower vitamin D levels in people with hair loss.
- Zinc: Essential for hair tissue growth and repair. Zinc deficiency causes telogen effluvium. Vegetarians and vegans are at higher risk due to phytate binding in plant foods.
- Vitamin B12: Deficiency can cause hair loss through impaired DNA synthesis in rapidly dividing follicle cells. More common in vegetarians, vegans, and older adults.
The first step should always be blood testing to identify actual deficiencies rather than blind supplementation.
What Supplements Have the Strongest Evidence?
Evidence quality varies dramatically between hair growth supplements. Here is the evidence hierarchy:
Strong evidence (address deficiency):
- Iron supplementation: When ferritin is below 30 ng/mL, iron supplementation consistently improves hair shedding. Take with vitamin C to enhance absorption; avoid taking with calcium or tea which inhibit absorption.
- Vitamin D: 1,000-4,000 IU daily to achieve blood levels of 40-60 ng/mL. A 2020 study in Dermatologic Therapy found vitamin D supplementation improved hair density in deficient patients with female pattern hair loss.
Moderate evidence:
- Zinc: 15-30mg daily if deficient. Over-supplementation (above 50mg/day) can cause copper deficiency, which paradoxically also causes hair loss.
- Marine protein supplements (Viviscal): AminoMar complex showed 32% increased terminal hair count in a 2015 RCT.
Weak or no evidence in non-deficient individuals:
- Biotin (only helps if biotin-deficient — rare)
- Collagen supplements
- Multivitamin "hair gummies"
Use WAYJET's Medical Report Analyzer to upload your blood work and identify which specific deficiencies, if any, may be contributing to your hair concerns.
Can Too Many Supplements Harm Hair Growth?
Over-supplementation is an under-recognized cause of hair problems:
- Vitamin A excess: Hypervitaminosis A is a well-documented cause of hair loss. Daily intake above 10,000 IU can trigger telogen effluvium. Many "hair, skin, and nails" supplements contain vitamin A — check labels carefully.
- Selenium excess: Doses above 400 mcg daily can cause hair loss, nail brittleness, and neurological symptoms. Brazil nuts are extremely high in selenium (one nut contains 68-91 mcg).
- Zinc excess: Above 50mg daily can deplete copper, causing hair loss and potentially anemia. Always take copper (2mg) if supplementing zinc above 30mg for extended periods.
- Iron excess: Iron overload (hemochromatosis) can damage organs. Never supplement iron without confirming deficiency through blood testing. Ferritin, serum iron, and TIBC should all be checked.
The safest approach is:
- Get comprehensive blood work (CBC, ferritin, vitamin D, zinc, B12, thyroid panel)
- Supplement only identified deficiencies at therapeutic doses
- Retest levels after 3-6 months to confirm correction
- Avoid "mega-dose" multi-ingredient hair supplements that may contain excessive amounts of certain nutrients
Questions fréquentes
Should I take a hair vitamin if my blood work is normal?
If your blood levels of iron, vitamin D, zinc, B12, and thyroid hormones are all within optimal ranges, additional vitamin supplementation is unlikely to improve hair growth. The marketing claims of most hair vitamins target people who assume they might be deficient. If your levels are normal, focus on other evidence-based treatments like minoxidil or address non-nutritional causes.
How long do supplements take to improve hair growth?
Once a deficiency is corrected, improvements in hair shedding typically begin within 2-3 months. Visible regrowth takes 4-6 months, and maximum improvement occurs at 12-18 months. Hair grows approximately 1 cm per month, so even after follicles resume normal function, it takes time for new growth to become noticeable.
Can I get enough nutrients for hair health from diet alone?
Yes, a well-balanced diet can provide all necessary nutrients for hair health. Iron-rich foods (red meat, lentils, spinach), vitamin D (fatty fish, fortified foods plus sunlight), zinc (oysters, beef, pumpkin seeds), and B12 (animal products) should be prioritized. However, certain populations (vegetarians, those with absorption issues, postpartum women) may need supplementation.
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