Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Exclusive | CIA not fully cooperating on probe into COVID origins ‘cover-up’, alleged monitoring of analysts: intel watchdog

Exclusive | CIA not fully cooperating on probe into COVID origins ‘cover-up’, alleged monitoring of analysts: intel watchdog

July 2, 2026
Florida board votes to bar illegal immigrants from public colleges

Florida board votes to bar illegal immigrants from public colleges

July 2, 2026
Why Was Sully Written Out of ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ in Season 4? Scott Patterson’s Exit Explained

Why Was Sully Written Out of ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ in Season 4? Scott Patterson’s Exit Explained

July 2, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Exclusive | CIA not fully cooperating on probe into COVID origins ‘cover-up’, alleged monitoring of analysts: intel watchdog
  • Florida board votes to bar illegal immigrants from public colleges
  • Why Was Sully Written Out of ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ in Season 4? Scott Patterson’s Exit Explained
  • 76ers agree to two-year deal with Anfernee Simons in latest NBA free agency splash
  • Your period blood is trying to tell you something — the biggest red flags to look out for
  • JPMorgan ordered to keep paying Charlie Javice’s legal bills, topping $70M
  • AOC throws her weight behind progressive Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan Senate race
  • Letitia James faces heat as feds suspend Medicaid fraud unit funds
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Is grey hair reversible? Scientists are putting color back into strands
Is grey hair reversible? Scientists are putting color back into strands
Lifestyle

Is grey hair reversible? Scientists are putting color back into strands

News RoomBy News RoomJuly 2, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

Haircare experts are going for a silver metal.

Emerging research says that it may be possible to reverse the effects of greying hair without dye-ing for a solution. That’s according to Spanish doctors who recently noticed that as their lung cancer patients began to recover thanks to new immunotherapy drugs, their hair began gaining pigment, too.

At first, the scientists thought it was a fluke — until they realized that even patients outside their care were getting their hair color back after taking new treatment drugs like Keytruda, Opdivo and Tecentriq. That led University of Alabama scientist Melissa Harris to start digging into ways to help anyone with an automated Clairol refill on Amazon.

So, when will going grey be passé? Sooner than you think.

For starters, less than 25% of people have a significant amount of grey hair by age 50, according to a 2012 study in the British Journal of Dermatology. But nearly 90% of us do have some pigment loss before hitting the big 5-0.

That’s due to melanocytes, the pigment cells living inside your hair follicles that pump color into every strand as it grows. They’re supposed to keep getting fueled by a backup crew of melanocyte stem cells, but factors like stress, fatigue, and our bodies’ aging repair cycles get in the way. Eventually, the pigment cycle gets depleted beyond repair, and the body doesn’t create new melanin, the colorful cell byproduct that also determines our skin and eye color.

Another big factor is genetics, which means if your grandmother was Cruella de Vil, you’ll inherit more than her spotted fur coat — you’ll also get her signature shock of white hair. (Speaking of dogs, they, too, can go grey, getting a “sugar face” around the muzzle or, in the case of some huskies and hounds, a white streak along their back.)

Scientists think that immunotherapy drug treatments help with greying hair because they’re designed to reawaken and strengthen the body’s existing stem cells, which act as tiny maintenance men that clear debris, repair damage, and restart natural healing cycles. (Think of it this way: If your body is an apartment building, stem cells are your supers.) While the drugs were created for the crucial work of helping stop cancer, a side effect is rebooting the pigmentation process for hair strands.

At the University of Alabama, Harris and her team are isolating the immunotherapy treatments for hair pigment alone. But they haven’t yet tested their findings on human subjects, which means it’ll be months — at minimum — before we know how this can apply to the average shampoo-er.

Until then, some new supplements have hit the market, promising to reverse our grey matter. In 2021, a supplement called Arey hit the market with claims that it could “repigment” hair beginning to desaturate by reducing oxidative stress, the main cause of early hair greying.

Tech guru and longevity junkie Bryan Johnson told followers in March that he was using a blend of the melanin-stimulating GR-7 serum that claims to be a superfood for melanocytes, along with Mayraki, a peptide serum made from fo-ti root, a key ingredient in herbal Asian medicine that showed some promise in 2015 studies to keep strands in living color.

Of course, some people see grey hair as a sex symbol — and with good reason.

In the 1920s, baseball pitcher Jessee Petty earned the nickname “the silver fox” due to his grey hair and sleek physical form; the term is now an easy descriptor for dudes who get hotter as they age, including actors like George Clooney and Idris Elba.

Meanwhile, Andie MacDowell and Salma Hayek continue to maintain bombshell status even as they become grey ladies. In January, 50-year-old model Stephanie Cavalli opened the Chanel couture show with her natural grey hair on full view. (The upstate New Yorker told Vogue she was “walking on clouds” from the experience.)

Scientists also think grey hair has an evolutionary advantage: Male silverback gorillas are seen as the most powerful in their troop because they have earned the trust of their peers and the lived experience of battle.

And in 1998, a research journal proposed the “grandmother hypothesis” that older-looking women were prioritized in early human tribes because their ancestral knowledge and social adeptness boosted the entire community’s odds of survival.

The silver-tressed fan favorite Queen Charlotte on “Bridgerton” would agree. So would Jennifer Lopez and Sarah Jessica Parker, both of whom have rocked grey hair on recent red carpets.

But if you’re not ready to white-out your roots just yet, know that science will soon have your back. Or rather, your scalp.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Fitness influencer banned from flight for attempting to board ‘naked’ amid record-breaking heatwave 

Fitness influencer banned from flight for attempting to board ‘naked’ amid record-breaking heatwave 

JCPenney shoppers are snapping up amazing deals as iconic department store prepares to shutter across the US

JCPenney shoppers are snapping up amazing deals as iconic department store prepares to shutter across the US

‘Most beautiful girl’ Thylane Blondeau’s childhood reveals the ‘dark side’ of being a kiddie supermodel

‘Most beautiful girl’ Thylane Blondeau’s childhood reveals the ‘dark side’ of being a kiddie supermodel

French bombshell dubbed ‘the most beautiful girl in the world’ as a kid gets married at 25

French bombshell dubbed ‘the most beautiful girl in the world’ as a kid gets married at 25

Patriotic shoppers blast brands for ‘snubbing’ America 250 while pandering to World Cup fans: ‘This is a big deal’

Patriotic shoppers blast brands for ‘snubbing’ America 250 while pandering to World Cup fans: ‘This is a big deal’

‘Blokecore’ style sweeps US as World Cup fever takes over: ‘Made for the summer of football’

‘Blokecore’ style sweeps US as World Cup fever takes over: ‘Made for the summer of football’

Sephora is making a major change across US stores that stressed shoppers will love: ‘I really need this’

Sephora is making a major change across US stores that stressed shoppers will love: ‘I really need this’

Second Lady Usha Vance claps back at New York Times’ commentary on her ‘body-hugging’ maternity fashion: ‘Here’s the receipt’

Second Lady Usha Vance claps back at New York Times’ commentary on her ‘body-hugging’ maternity fashion: ‘Here’s the receipt’

30 going on 21: Bryan Johnson’s girlfriend reveals extreme biohacking that made her skin age backwards

30 going on 21: Bryan Johnson’s girlfriend reveals extreme biohacking that made her skin age backwards

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Florida board votes to bar illegal immigrants from public colleges

Florida board votes to bar illegal immigrants from public colleges

July 2, 2026
Why Was Sully Written Out of ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ in Season 4? Scott Patterson’s Exit Explained

Why Was Sully Written Out of ‘Sullivan’s Crossing’ in Season 4? Scott Patterson’s Exit Explained

July 2, 2026
76ers agree to two-year deal with Anfernee Simons in latest NBA free agency splash

76ers agree to two-year deal with Anfernee Simons in latest NBA free agency splash

July 2, 2026
Your period blood is trying to tell you something — the biggest red flags to look out for

Your period blood is trying to tell you something — the biggest red flags to look out for

July 2, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
JPMorgan ordered to keep paying Charlie Javice’s legal bills, topping M

JPMorgan ordered to keep paying Charlie Javice’s legal bills, topping $70M

July 2, 2026
AOC throws her weight behind progressive Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan Senate race

AOC throws her weight behind progressive Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan Senate race

July 2, 2026
Letitia James faces heat as feds suspend Medicaid fraud unit funds

Letitia James faces heat as feds suspend Medicaid fraud unit funds

July 2, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.