Erica Glenn, MD
Erica Glenn, MD, pediatrician, department of pediatrics, Children’s Hospital and Research Center, Oakland, California. She was coauthor of a research letter published in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.
There’s a much discussed natural treatment for dandruff that’s all over the Internet.
But is it legit?
That’s the question that one recent graduate of St. Louis University School of Medicine in Missouri, Erica Glenn, MD, asked herself while she was working with a pediatric dermatologist and encountered many parents asking about natural remedies for their babies’ dandruff. So she searched the scientific literature on the topic and made an interesting discovery.
She found that not only does this popular natural treatment not cure dandruff—it actually may make dandruff worse.
To set the record straight, she cowrote a letter that was recently published in a major medical journal, and then I spoke with her to get the lowdown on which dandruff remedies actually work…
Dandruff—dried skin that peels off the scalp—is most frequently caused by an overgrowth of a fungus called Malassezia. This fungus appears on the scalps of many people in small amounts without causing problems, but sometimes stress, illness, excess skin oil, changes in hormones and even just a bad roll of the genetic dice can cause it to overgrow.
The common Web remedy typically instructs people with dandruff to apply about eight to 10 drops of olive or vegetable oil to the scalp, cover the head with a shower cap and then keep the oil on the scalp overnight.
The problem with this treatment, said Dr. Glenn, is that these two oils provide the perfect environment for the Malassezia fungus to thrive! That’s because this fungus consumes saturated fats. (Even though vegetable and olive oils contain mostly unsaturated fats, they contain some saturated fats, too.) To make matters worse, the unsaturated fats in the olive oil and vegetable oil can cause further inflammation and scaling.
So if vegetable or olive oil isn’t the solution, what’s the best way to treat dandruff—and prevent it from forming in the future?
Most people will be able to make “hair dust” a thing of the past by following Dr. Glenn’s tips, below…