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  4. ›Why you're losing hair on Ozempic (and what to do about it)
Efeitos Colaterais

Why you're losing hair on Ozempic (and what to do about it)

5 de jun. de 2026·6 min de leitura·21 visualizações·Equipe Editorial PeptPro

The first thing my doctor said when I told her about my Ozempic hair loss was: "That's completely normal." I wanted to throw something. Normal for who? Normal felt like my hair was leaving my body in clumps and I was watching myself disappear strand by strand in the mirror.

I was 37 when I started. The weight was coming off beautifully. Within three months I had dropped two sizes. My energy was up, my blood sugar was finally under control, and I felt like I had figured out a secret that my body had been keeping from me for years. And then the fourth month hit and my hair started falling out in the shower. Not a little. A lot.

What your body is actually doing

When you lose weight quickly, your body gets confused. It thinks something is wrong, like you're starving or going through a crisis. Hair is one of the first things it decides to stop investing in. Your vital organs come first, obviously. Hair is cosmetic. So your hair follicles shut down production and everything that would have become a strand of hair just falls out instead. Doctors call this telogen effluvium. I call it one of the most terrifying side effects nobody warns you about.

The tricky part is that it's delayed. You might start Ozempic in January and not see hair loss until April or May. That lag made me think it was something else entirely. A bad shampoo. Stress from work. Anything but the medication that was finally helping me. My doctor had to explain the timeline to me twice before I understood. Once I did, it still didn't make it feel better, but at least it made sense.

If you're tracking what's happening with your body right now, you need a place to log all of this. PeptPro lets you track side effects, medication levels, weight history, and more. I started using it after my diagnosis and the difference in my appointments has been remarkable. My doctor can see patterns I would never think to mention.

What actually helped me

I'm going to be honest with you because this process broke me down and rebuilt me in ways I did not expect. These are the things that made a difference for me personally, not medical advice. Talk to your own doctor first.

1. I stopped washing my hair every single day. I know that sounds basic, but I was raised thinking you had to shampoo daily. Turns out that extra manipulation was making the problem worse. I switched to every other day and my scalp stopped being so irritated.

  1. I increased my protein intake significantly. Hair is made of keratin and keratin needs building blocks. I started eating more eggs, fish, and legumes. My dermatologist recommended a protein-focused approach and after about eight weeks I noticed less shedding.
  2. I got my vitamin D and iron levels checked. Both were low. I had no idea. Once I started supplementing under medical supervision, things improved. Get your levels checked before guessing.
  3. I gave up blow drying and heat styling for three months. This was devastating for my self-image but my hair needed a break. I wore it in braids most days. No one noticed as much as I thought they would.
  4. I waited. I know this sounds like nothing, but honestly, patience was the biggest part of my recovery. My hair started regrowing visibly around month seven. The new strands looked ridiculous at first, short and fuzzy around my hairline. But they kept growing.


The part nobody talks about

There is a psychological toll that nobody discusses openly. You finally gathered the courage to treat your body with medication that helps with obesity, and now you are losing your hair on top of it. It feels unfair. It feels cruel. Some days I looked in the mirror and did not recognize myself. Not because of the weight loss, but because of how much thinner my hair looked on my head.

I started wearing headbands everywhere. Then wigs on bad days. Then I stopped leaving the house as much. My partner kept telling me I looked fine, but I did not feel fine. Eventually I started seeing a therapist who specializes in body image and chronic illness. She reframed the entire experience for me. She helped me understand that grieving my hair was not vain. It was real loss and it deserved to be processed as such.

Tracking my symptoms with PeptPro gave me something to do with my hands when I felt out of control. I logged every shed, every new growth, every emotional day. The app stores your medication history and weight progression so you can look back and see how far you have come. That perspective saved me during the darkest weeks.

You are not alone

When I finally opened up about this in a group chat with three friends, two of them said they had experienced the same thing. One after bariatric surgery, one after starting a different GLP-1 medication. None of us had ever mentioned it to each other before that moment. We all suffered in silence, thinking we were the only ones.

That is why I am writing this. Because someone needs to tell you that what you are experiencing is documented, understood, and usually temporary. Your body is adjusting to a massive change. That adjustment takes time and it is not linear. Some months will feel worse. Some months will feel better.

I am now ten months in. My hair is not back to where it was before Ozempic, but it is close. I have bangs again that I have not had in years because my hair was always too thin to pull off that look. I am still on the medication. I am still losing weight, more slowly now. And I finally feel like I understand my own body in a way I never did before.

If you are in the thick of it right now, please hold on. It gets better. Use a tool like PeptPro to document your journey and bring that data to your next appointment. Your future self will thank you for tracking everything.

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Aviso: Este conteúdo é apenas informativo e não substitui orientação médica profissional. Consulte sempre seu médico antes de iniciar, alterar ou interromper qualquer tratamento.

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