Has anyone experienced hair loss after an ostomy?

Posted by bettes @bettes, Aug 4 9:50am

I realize I am almost 82, but I have always had a thick head of hair until my colostomy. I have shed so much it is shocking. I know it is a relatively small problem, and my hairdresser says it is normal after a trauma. But I guess I need a pep talk from others who have experienced this and gotten through it okay. On the bright side, what I have left of my hair has turned curly!

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Profile picture for piki @piki

@kasandphyl1 In my district...East central Ontario, we have home visiting therapists. Six free visits to get you going. You can call your local community organization to see what you can access.

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Do you take advantage of them, Kathy? And do you do your exercises between visits? I am in Florida, US, but if I were closer I would come and do them with you🤗

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Profile picture for kasandphyl1 @kasandphyl1

My name is Kathy and I had a colostomy bag in April 18th 2025 for Diverticulitis and perforated bowel. I have had curly hair all of my life and since my hair is falling out and very kinky at the ends. I fear that I am going bald. I thought it was from the Predisone that I take for PMR, but I have been taking it fir a year and had no problems till April. So..........what do we do about it?

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@kasandphyl1 In my district...East central Ontario, we have home visiting therapists. Six free visits to get you going. You can call your local community organization to see what you can access.

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Profile picture for kasandphyl1 @kasandphyl1

@bettes
Thank you for replying. I hope it will stop falling out soon because I am getting worried about it.
If it doesn't I will get the shampoo that you are using and some more vitamins. I think I take more vitamins now than meds. I am 80 and not used to being so weak and tired and loss of muscles. Thank you again Bettes............. Kathy

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Kathy, are you getting physical therapy? Do you live anywhere near a Senior Center? They have exercise classes for seniors that help a lot of people. There are also chair yoga classes offered in many libraries and similar places. Truth be told, you can either give in to this or fight it. You need to fight. Bette

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Profile picture for bettes @bettes

@kasandphyl1
So, Kathy, I have taken heart from all the comments I have seen here. My colostomy was late March, so we are close to the same timetable. I have been using biotin shampoo and am taking a biotin vitamin. I think (hope) they have been working, but in any event, when I now comb my hair it has stopped coming out. As I noted, my hairdresser said that it was the trauma I had been though and that it would get better. And she was right. At my age(82), I had a very thick head of hair with lots of body. Not that way any more. But it is better and a bet yours will be, too. Keep the faith😇. Bette

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@bettes
Thank you for replying. I hope it will stop falling out soon because I am getting worried about it.
If it doesn't I will get the shampoo that you are using and some more vitamins. I think I take more vitamins now than meds. I am 80 and not used to being so weak and tired and loss of muscles. Thank you again Bettes............. Kathy

REPLY
Profile picture for kasandphyl1 @kasandphyl1

My name is Kathy and I had a colostomy bag in April 18th 2025 for Diverticulitis and perforated bowel. I have had curly hair all of my life and since my hair is falling out and very kinky at the ends. I fear that I am going bald. I thought it was from the Predisone that I take for PMR, but I have been taking it fir a year and had no problems till April. So..........what do we do about it?

Jump to this post

@kasandphyl1
So, Kathy, I have taken heart from all the comments I have seen here. My colostomy was late March, so we are close to the same timetable. I have been using biotin shampoo and am taking a biotin vitamin. I think (hope) they have been working, but in any event, when I now comb my hair it has stopped coming out. As I noted, my hairdresser said that it was the trauma I had been though and that it would get better. And she was right. At my age(82), I had a very thick head of hair with lots of body. Not that way any more. But it is better and a bet yours will be, too. Keep the faith😇. Bette

REPLY

My name is Kathy and I had a colostomy bag in April 18th 2025 for Diverticulitis and perforated bowel. I have had curly hair all of my life and since my hair is falling out and very kinky at the ends. I fear that I am going bald. I thought it was from the Predisone that I take for PMR, but I have been taking it fir a year and had no problems till April. So..........what do we do about it?

REPLY
Profile picture for piki @piki

@bettes
Hi! And mine hit at 82. I was a fully functioning human, although admittedly somewhat slowed down, and then suddenly I was not and soon I became almost bedridden, watching my energy and abilities to function become depleted. Sorry. It sounds so whiny when I write/say it. Perhaps today is just a bad day.

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We all have bad days. But it beats the alternative. I get counseling. Can you do that? It is a life saver.

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Profile picture for bettes @bettes

Hi! Yes, I agree. I don’t think anyone can give completely effective advice until they have walked the walk. I was extremely blessed to have been very healthy and strong until I was 80, and then it all hit the fan. I am lucky to have long term care insurance, so while I am paying something out of pocket, the insurance is covering a lot. I am going to keep help as long as it is practical, and until I can manage my husband’s care myself. I am hanging in, though, and it sounds like you are, too! Bette

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@bettes
Hi! And mine hit at 82. I was a fully functioning human, although admittedly somewhat slowed down, and then suddenly I was not and soon I became almost bedridden, watching my energy and abilities to function become depleted. Sorry. It sounds so whiny when I write/say it. Perhaps today is just a bad day.

REPLY
Profile picture for piki @piki

@bettes
Hello Senior Lady, I had no idea that ‘elderly’ was now a pejorative term. I certainly don’t fancy it. And glad to read that your hair is back and your pain levels are down It might be expected that your hairdresser knew about hair loss, but strange (and somewhat disheartening) that an anesthesiologist did not. On the other hand, it’s the patients who end up learning how to wean off a vast variety of drugs and most doctors and pharmacists don’t seem to.

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Hi! Yes, I agree. I don’t think anyone can give completely effective advice until they have walked the walk. I was extremely blessed to have been very healthy and strong until I was 80, and then it all hit the fan. I am lucky to have long term care insurance, so while I am paying something out of pocket, the insurance is covering a lot. I am going to keep help as long as it is practical, and until I can manage my husband’s care myself. I am hanging in, though, and it sounds like you are, too! Bette

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Profile picture for bettes @bettes

I do some grant writing for the local Area Agency on Aging, and since I am 82, I have asked that the staff fro the CEO on down do not refer to us as elderly. Call us seniors, or older people, whatever. But not the elderly, please. It is pejorative.
Back to hair. Mine was coming out by the could after my colostomy in March, and it went from straight as a pin to curly and was fragile. I stopped coloring it for a few months because I didn’t want to damage it, and I started using a biotin shampoo and taking a biotin tablet every day. I had my hip replaced a week ago and I was concerned that I might have some hair loss again. I even spoke with the anesthesiologist about it, and she said she had never heard of anesthesia being a cause of the problem. My hairdresser said she had seen this before many times in patients experiencing major surgery, and that it is definitely caused by stress on the body and mind. Makes sense to me.
Anyway, so far so good with the hip surgery, although the pain this past week was greater than I had been led to believe by everyone I had talked to. My surgeon said that mine was an extreme case of bone on bone—one of the worse he had ever seen, so that was probably why the pain was so awful. And my hair seems to be okay—and it is definitely growing back enough so that I will need a haircut in a couple of weeks
My ostomy has been cooking along throughout this whole thing. I have discovered that I like disposable pouches, so that is what I have been using. The pain meds have made my stools very hard—they are like pebbles you could skip across a pond. But I am weening off the drugs, so should be back to normal soon. So that’s it. Pain is decreasing and the hip surgery was a success ( saw the X-ray of the “after”, my hair is growing back, and don’t call me elderly🤗

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@bettes
Hello Senior Lady, I had no idea that ‘elderly’ was now a pejorative term. I certainly don’t fancy it. And glad to read that your hair is back and your pain levels are down It might be expected that your hairdresser knew about hair loss, but strange (and somewhat disheartening) that an anesthesiologist did not. On the other hand, it’s the patients who end up learning how to wean off a vast variety of drugs and most doctors and pharmacists don’t seem to.

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