Cosmetics (Apr 2019)

Stiffness of Human Hair Correlates with the Fractions of Cortical Cell Types

  • Yusuke Ezawa,
  • Shinobu Nagase,
  • Akira Mamada,
  • Shigeto Inoue,
  • Kenzo Koike,
  • Takashi Itou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics6020024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
p. 24

Abstract

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(1) Background: The objective of this work was to elucidate the hair microstructure which correlates with the stiffness of human hair fibers. (2) Methods: Bending moduli of hair fibers were evaluated for the hair samples from 156 Japanese female subjects. Hair transverse sections were dual-stained with fluorescent dyes which can stain para- and ortho-like cortical cells separately, and observed under a fluorescence light microscope. Atomic force microscopy nanoindentation measurements were performed to examine the modulus inside macrofibrils. (3) Results: The difference in bending moduli between the maximum and the minimum values was more than double. The hair of high bending modulus was rich in para-like cortical cells and the bending modulus significantly correlated with the fraction of para-like cortical cells to the whole cortex. On the other hand, the elastic moduli inside macrofibrils were almost same for the para- and ortho-like cortical cells. (4) Conclusions: Hair bending modulus depends on the fractions of the constitutional cortical cell types. The contribution of the intermacrofibrillar materials, which differed in their morphologies and amounts of para- and ortho-like cortical cells, is plausible as a cause of the difference in the modulus of the cortical cell types.

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