Can hair really turn white from fright?

Posted on Monday, October 26, 2009 12:48 PM PT
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The phenomenon of hair turning white from fright (or shock or grief or stress) persists in literature, poetry and even a handful of medical journals.

But is there any truth to the rumor that we can actually scare our hair?

Yes and no, says dermatologist Dr. David Orentreich, associate director of the Orentreich Medical Group in New York and assistant clinical professor in the department of dermatology at Mount Sinai School of Medicine.

“It’s appealing on a literary or poetic level that a person’s experience could be so severe or terrifying that they age overnight,” he says. “But you can’t lose pigment in your hair. Once it leaves your scalp, it’s non-living; it’s dead.”

But, Orentreich says, while fear can’t suddenly cause your hair to turn white, there is a medical condition that could make people think it has.

Image: A Nightmare on Elm Street
New Line Cinema
The hair of Nancy Thompson, played by Heather Langenkamp, suddenly starts to turn white after Freddie Kruger torments her in her dreams in 1984's "Nightmare on Elm Street."

Alopecia areata is an autoimmune condition that attacks hair follicles, causing pigmented hair such as black, brown, red, or blonde to fall out, leaving the gray and white nonpigmented hairs behind. (Eventually most people lose all their hair entirely.)

“If someone has salt-and-pepper hair – a mixture of gray and black – and they develop alopecia areata, the dark hairs can fall out quickly,” he says. “So it appears that they’ve gone gray overnight.”

Stress, as it turns out, may be a trigger for some autoimmune disorders.

“It’s conceivable for a person who has a tendency for alopecia areata to go through a stressful experience which makes it flair up and the first thing that happens is their dark hair falls out,” he says. “And that can happen quickly – in days or weeks – leaving just the gray hair.”

Although autoimmune diseases have been around forever, Orentreich says it’s only been in recent years that doctors have come to understand their impact.

“These phenomena would occur but they were completely mysterious,” he says. “No one had any inkling that the immune system could cause hair to fall out. There was only a primitive understanding – if any understanding – of the immune system.”

Fear, shock or grief, on the other hand, were something people could wrap their brains around, which probably explains why emotions play a huge part in most of the stories about hair turning white overnight.

According to a 2008 paper in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, the first documented case of sudden hair whitening was in the Talmud in 83 A.D. The victim was a 17-year-old boy who was appointed chief of the main Israeli Talmudic academy. His sudden white hair was said to have been a “consequence of strenuous studying.”

In later years, the phenomenon was attributed to Marie Antoinette, whose auburn locks supposedly turned ghostly white the night before she lost her head to the guillotine and to Shah Jahan of India after his favorite wife died (he went on to build the Taj Mahal in her honor).  Even sharpshooter Annie Oakley reportedly fell victim at age 41 after she was involved in a horrific train accident (an alternate story claims her white hair was the result of an overly hot bath).

In the '80s "Nightmare on Elm Street" horror movie franchise, a shock of the heroine's hair turns white after she is terrorized in her dreams.

There have been reports of sudden blanching as a result of bear attacks, ill-advised bets, shipwrecks, adultery and the death – or serious injury – of a loved one.  A 1902 British Medical Journal even described the case of a 22-year-old woman who witnessed a woman’s throat being cut and got up the next morning to find half her pubic hair had turned white.

According to Orentreich, though, even white pubic hairs could be explained by the autoimmune disease.

“When it attacks hair, sometimes the hair will keep growing with no pigment,” he says.
Alopecia areata may not be the only explanation for this hair-razing condition, though. Researchers who have studied historical references to the phenomenon also believe a “sudden” change in hair color could also be traced to hair dye simply washing out.

“If you get your hair colored today and then stop getting it colored, it takes a number of weeks or months for the gray to grow out,” says Orentreich. “But years ago, the dyes weren’t permanent. It could be something like that.”

Comments

The comment, "Eventually most people lose all their hair entirely." is not accurate. Most people who have alopecia areata will experience hair regrowth. Only a portion of people lose all of their hair.
Hair can turn white due to copper deficiency.  In theory, if your diet is deficit in copper or you're over dosing on zinc you could develop premnmature white hair.
I thought white (gray) hair is a result of our body chemistry emitting too much amonia.  Could extremely emotion experiences change body chemistry to emit amonia "overnight" and cause gray hair?
 Working as a guard during the early sixties,
I saw in a county jail a 23 yr. old inmate who was scared to death by holding him upside down over the 3rd tier railing. A week later his hair started turning pure white and after two months was completely white. This I witnessed personally.
...That's one man's observation.
This article is wrong. I had an ectopic pregnancy when I was 30 and was rushed into surgery on a Monday evening. I came home on Tuesday morning. On Wednesday morning I woke up to find that the very front lock of my hair had turned white. It was only about 30-50 hairs, but it definitely happened. The hairs fell out after a week or two. I am 50 now and have prematurely white hair, so maybe that is the link scientists should be looking for instead of saying it doesn't happen.
A recent study concluded that gray hair is a result of too much hydrogen peroxide produced by your body.
This article forgot to mention one of the most famous cases of black hair turning white:

When Barbara Bush (the former first lady) lost her baby when she was a young lady her black hair turned white in just a matter of months and never turned black again.
my husband in his 30's was training for a biathalon. Two spots of hair on his head turned completely white, fell out, then grew back normal. I think it was a vitamin deficiency while training. he has brown hair and these 3 inch spots were white as snow.
Had a very difficult pregnancy whereby I spent 2 weeks in the hospital requiring feeding tubes resulting in an emergency C-Section. Checked in with a jet black mane of healthy hair, checked out with a solid gray streak down down the center of my scalp, I was 24. Never used hair dye. Never had any previous health complications. My son was born healthy with the same head of jet black healthy hair. It happens!
Quite a few World War II veterans hair turned white because of so much war violence. After they come home from either Europe or South Pacific, they hair returned to their normal hair colour. I knew an individual who experienced this himself.
Yes it can.  I knew a friend that lost part of his hand in an accident.  His wifes hair had a white streek in it within a week.
Perhaps this is what happened to your hair...frightened of work?
Quite a few World War II veterans hair turned white because of so much war violence. After they come home from either Europe or South Pacific, their hair color returned back to normal. I knew an individual who experienced this himself.
I am a licensed cosmetologist and I can tell you that this article is inaccurate.  I used to have a client who was in a fire as a young girl.  I believe she lost her parents in the fire and she said that since that day whatever grew out of her scalp was snow white, she had pictures of herself before the fire and her hair was beautiful red. But from that fire on, her hair had grown out white from the trauma of the fire and loss she suffered.
My Dad was a King County Sheriff and in 1971 he was hit by a drunk driver while on patrol. He had dark brown hair. When they pull him from the wreckage his hair was pure white.
Yes, I believe it can.  A friends father who was in this early 70's died of a heart attack and his hair was jet black.  The next day at his wake, his hair was white as snow.

PJ - Colorado Springs, CO
My grandmother was put in a prisoner of war camp in Poland at age 16, but by age 20 (when she escaped), had a streak of white hair.
The article leaves a lot to be desired. Vitiligo, another autoimmune disease, is known for turning skin white, the theory being that the immune system goes after pigment cells. But in vitiligo skin, hair often goes white too. For caucasians, vitiligo skin may not be noticeable, but white hair will be, at least for younger people.
I had owned "Air Power" and few VHS's about aviation. The show had nothing to do about hair change, it was about flying fighter jets. But there was a pilot on there who said he ejected at a high speed and high altitude when his jet malfunctioned. He stated that the ejection was so violent and scary that the front part of his hair turned white from it. I am sure those facts can be checked. But I dont recall the pilots name
Anita, the article said that hair can't suddenly turn white. What the article is aluding to is that existing hair cannot turn while. I don't believe they are saying that new hair can't grow in white. I knew a young man whose hair turned totally white after a tragic car accident (not overnight though)
Too funny, the comments calling the article wrong. There's not a single opposing comment that the article says couldn't happen. They are saying this DOES happen. People read the article. It states that a traumatic emotional event CAN cause hair to turn white BUT gives the reason as the emotions cause an autoimmune response to cause this to happen. Wow, there's a lot of experts in the comments who cannot understand the article. Good for them.
After the savage revolutionaries threatened the French Royal Family and then killed her husband; did not Queen Marie Antoinette's hair turn white? I believe she was only 36 at her execution.
My father was killed in an accident when I was 16 and within a month or two, I had grey hair. I never colored my hair before that because I was 16. I'm now in my 30s and have grey hair in the exact same areas that I have it had since I was 16 years old. No more and no less. So, I believe that stress alone can turn your hair grey.
My late husband was drafted when he was 18 years old and served in Germany and France in the last six months of WWII (European Theatre). His hair had been a light ash brown. When he finally went home (almost 2 yrs. later), his hair was gray and white.  The color never returned.
Ask your doctor why, as one ages, hair, what ever the origin, will turn white ALL at once. Not slowly from the bottom up, or from the bottom down. The change to white occurs along the whole strand, at least from our time line, instantaneously.
Why...? Because the triple helix that forms hair changes in such a way that it reflects white light as opposed to the original spectrum that it did earlier.
Your doctor, I believe, needs to take a course or two at The TRI Institute in Princeton, NJ

Steve Riley PhD
My house caught fire and burned down. I was asleep when it happened. I opened by bedroom door to a horrific site--I got out.  Some animals died in the fire and we lost everything. The kids thought that I had paper in my hair--my hair turned white around the temple area.  I do not have alopecia.
Read the article thoroughly and still stand by my comment. After checking out of the hospital yes I indeed had new growth that came in white, however I had shoulder length locks that were also white. Explain that?
My brother went to Iraq a young man with jet black hair.  After two tours in Iraq, he is more salt than pepper.  
Both my daughters were born (four years apart) with my jet black hair. Both of them had surgery during their first year to correct cleft lip. Both had their hair change color VERY rapidly following surgery. The older one's hair went almost platinum, then to red, then to (my wife's) dark blonde. The younger one went straight to dark blonde.
A portion of my cousin's hair turned white after she watched the Gestapo take her father away.
My daughters cases don't sound like alopecia. Their hair did not fall out before the color change, nor did their dark hair grow light roots. The dark hair they already had went lighter. It was very distinct and very rapid, affecting all of their hair, even their eyebrows.
Yes, hair can turn white from fright. Stress over several months started my graying process.
Reading thru the comments it apparent that some of you didn't even bother to read the article. (or your reading comprehension needs some serious work)  The article isn't disputing that hair can turn white from fright or trauma, it's investigating why.

Most of you are neither scientist nor experts on the subject and are hardly in a position to dispute the details in the article.   Your casual or superficial experiences to the contrary are hardly conclusive facts.
I think that this is all crazy myself, but when my paretns died when I was 5, my dark brown hair turned pure white within 6 days. My grandmother was terrified but my grandpa told her and I that it was natural.
Article is wrong. Back in 80’s when I was a student in Italy, I lost my beloved dog, Morning after, was shocked when I saw myself in the mirror, I had several patches on my face size of Dime and Quarter without any hair, (feels and looks like deeply shaved area). Week later hair grew back; white as snow… it took me over several years to be cured, don’t know was time or medicated cream …
When I had a miscarriage, all of a sudden a big patch of my hair (5" or so) grew in as pure white.  As it grew longer and longer it looked strange because the bottom half was dark brown (the pre pregnancy hair) and everything afterwards was pure white.  It never turned back brown and the line is almost to the point that the brown will probably be gone with the next haircut.
To Rob:

The article does in fact dispute that existing hair can turn white from fright or trauma.  It says that fright or trauma can aggravate an autoimmune condition that causes pigmented hair to fall out, leaving the gray behind so that it seems as if hair has turned white overnight, when it is in reality the loss of the colored hair. The article states that existing hair is dead and cannot change color.  Most of the comments here are saying that they have in fact been witness to existing hair changing color.  YOU are the one who didn't read the article
Someone in my family a couple of generations ago was a bright red haired man.  He was working on a loading dock when a cargo container dropped from above on him.  He saw it coming, and when they uncovered him after the accident, his hair was completely white.  True story, not BS
It happened to me.  When I was 5 years old, my older sister told me there was a witch living under my bed & that if I ever saw her, my dark brown locks would turn white from fright.  That night I had a terrible dream about that witch in which she sprang from beneath my bed and grabbed me by the pants with a huge, red-hot hook.  Her nose was crooked and one eyeball was dangling from its socket.  A hideous cackle erupted from her twisted mouth.  I woke up horrified; chilled to the bone.  And sure enough, 55 years later I'm sporting a crown of pure, white hair.
On a related topic, my uncle apparently lost all of his body hair within months after his younger sister and his mother died within 6 months of each other in 1940/1941, according to my mother, his older sister.  He was eleven years old at the time.  He passed away in his 70's and never had any hair as long as I knew him.
I was born with dark hair, which fell out when I was a few months old and then I was a white blond\"tow head ". By the time I was 13 my hair was dirty blond. In my 30's it had darkened to a brown with auburn highlights. It has progressively darkened and now at age 64, my hair is nearly black. I have no grey hair at all.

Dee, Upstate, NY
As long as the hair color industry is still in business, my hair will never be white!
I Was in the US Marines in Vietnam, in 1966 and I knew a fellow marine who was 21 years old, with brown hair, 4 weeks later his hair was white from the stress
My sister was 13 when my father died.  She was very attached to him. In a matter of maybe two weeks her hair went very gray. I used to use color her hair because she was so young.  After about two or three years her hair color came back.
I nearly lost my son to a tragic accident. I was so frightened I coud not breath. Within a week a streak of my existing brown hair had turned white. I do not have alopecia. It sounds as if more research needs to be done on this subject.
Some of my head hair and pubic hair turned white when I lost twins in utero and then gave birth to them.  The hair I had at the time did not change color, but hair that emerged from that time on was white.  It later turned brown again.  So I had some hairs that were brown at the ends, white for an inch or two, then brown again.  It was very strange.

I always attributed it to the very high fever I had from the drug used to induce labor (a prostaglandin).  But it turns out that I do have an autoimmune disease, so maybe that was it.
Looks like the question is, can hair change color almost instantly. Steve Riley says yes and references the TRI institute in Princeton. Unfortunately their website does not talk about this fact. Lots of interesting stories especially the one from Tim Doe about the red head relative that was killed and when they pull him out his hair is white.
I would like to see if there is some genetic similarities among those hose hair has done this. I still don't see how it can happen so quickly though.
At the aftermath of the Pearl Harbor attack, of which my father was a whitness, many officers had their hair turn white by the next day.  I now have a history degree, and this has been mentioned by several authors.  The shock was too much, and had little to do with anything other than Japanese bombs.
Always the same " I saw it" no photos; no proof;  it can't happen; once a hair is grown it cannot change color on its own, period
Following my father's heart attack, he lost all his dark black hair. It started growing back not long after but was snow white.  In a few months, however, it was was back tohis normal color. It was very strange. The dr thought the nioxin in the heart meds was what caused it to grow back.


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