Understanding Normal Daily Hair Loss
On average, losing 50 to 100 hairs per day is completely normal for most adults. This natural cycle includes the growth, transition, and resting phases of each hair follicle. When you notice strands on your brush, in the shower drain, or on your pillow, it rarely signals a problem unless the amount suddenly doubles or triples. For someone transitioning to a low-carb diet or full ketogenic diet, shedding can increase temporarily due to the stress your body experiences during rapid metabolic shifts.
Why Keto and Low-Carb Diets Trigger Hair Shedding
The most common culprit is telogen effluvium, a form of temporary hair loss triggered by significant physiological stress. Cutting carbs drastically can cause hormonal fluctuations, especially in women aged 45-54 dealing with perimenopause. Insulin levels drop, cortisol may rise, and the body diverts energy away from non-essential functions like hair growth. In my book The Metabolic Reset, I explain how this often peaks 3-6 months into a new eating pattern as the body adapts to using fat for fuel. Joint pain, blood sugar management, and blood pressure improvements are benefits, but the initial 10-20 pound loss can shock follicles into the resting phase simultaneously.
Signs That Your Hair Loss Is Excessive
If you're losing more than 150-200 hairs daily, seeing widening part lines, or noticing bald patches, it's time to investigate. Track it for a week by gently combing over a white towel—count what comes out. Excessive loss often pairs with fatigue, brittle nails, or cold intolerance, pointing to nutrient shortfalls common in beginners on restrictive plans. Many in your situation have failed diets before and feel overwhelmed, but this isn't another unsustainable fad; it's a signal to fine-tune rather than quit.
Practical Steps to Reduce Hair Loss on Keto
First, ensure adequate protein intake of 1.2-1.6 grams per kilogram of ideal body weight to support keratin production. Prioritize electrolytes—aim for 4,000-5,000 mg sodium, 1,000 mg potassium, and 300-400 mg magnesium daily to stabilize hormones. Key micronutrients include biotin (30-100 mcg), zinc (15-30 mg), iron (if deficient, test ferritin levels above 40 ng/mL), and vitamin D (2,000-4,000 IU). Incorporate gentle movement like walking to ease joint pain instead of high-impact exercise. In The Metabolic Reset, I recommend a 4-week nutrient repletion phase with whole foods: avocados, salmon, eggs, spinach, and pumpkin seeds. Most see regrowth within 3-6 months without abandoning their low-carb lifestyle. Consult your doctor to rule out thyroid changes common with diabetes management and weight shifts. Consistency beats perfection—small adjustments prevent the cycle of diet failure and embarrassment around obesity struggles.