The benefits for scalp and hair growth, whether it works and how to use it In 2022, #ricewater and ‘putting rice water in my hair’ has racke...
Their secret? A special shampoo made of fermented rice water, brewed in a mixture of herbs, fruits and tea that they soak and fondly spread through their hair with a wooden comb.
The Japanese court ladies of the Heian period (794 to 1185 AD) would also comb ‘Yu-Su-Ru’ or the water from rinsing rice to maintain their ankle-length hair, and ethnic Thai people by the Da river have a festive hair-washing ceremony on the last day of the lunar year with fermented rice water.
Rice water is full of nutrients
This cloudy, starchy water left from soaking or boiling rice has a range of beneficial nutrients – such as zinc, magnesium, manganese, Vitamin B, amino acids and antioxidants, that are sometimes separately used in hair products. Dr Addada says that Vitamin E, Vitamin B and zinc are especially important for hair health.
Dr Rezgui says, “Before it was mostly grandmothers’ recipes, but now more and more scientific studies are supporting the fact that rice water can help the hair.
For the short answer – yes, definitely. Not every treatment suits everyone, but there are definitely benefits.”
She explains some of these benefits that rice water may have for your hair:
1. Instantly more volume, thickness and shine - Dr Rezgui says, “It has a lot of starch and gives a coating on the hair, it immediately has an effect of thickness, volume and shine especially for thin hair – giving a nourishing and protective effect. ”
Dr Rezgui actually started on a rice water journey herself, as so many of her patients asked her about it. She says, “I felt the best testimonial is when you try it yourself – I definitely feel that my hair is fuller, stronger and thicker, but I fall under the dry hair category so to avoid breaking the hair, and avoid this brittle feeling, I had to moisturise more during the treatment and apply conditioner before.”
2. It may improve your hair elasticity and texture - Dr Rezgui references a 2010 study by Japanese researchers published in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science concluded that using rice water for hair, especially it’s extract, improved hair elasticity and texture.
3. Protecting your strands from oxidative stress – Remember reading about Vitamic C’s antioxidant benefits for skin? Our hair, it turns out, also needs such protection and rice water is full of it.
Dr Rezgui says, “Free radicals are known to weaken the hair – we know that oxidative stress is bad for the skin, but also for the hair. Factors like environmental pollution, sun damage, chemicals and even inflammation on the scalp can cause oxidative damage, which means thinning, hair loss and greying of the hair.”
“Rice water is rich with antioxidants – some of them are vitamin E, inositol, these are strong antioxidants that we find in rice water that help prevent and reduces oxidative damage.”
Dr Addada adds, “It has inositol, which is a very famous antioxidant – with the studies it shows, it is an anti-inflammatory, so it is one of the best things that you can use for anti-inflammation.”
And actually, this is where rice water has long-term impact on your hair health, Dr Addada explains – in stopping inflammation on the scalp.
We’ve got it wrong – it’s actually all about the scalp with rice water
The scalp benefits of rice water are proven:
• Anti-inflammatory effects, that can help stop hair loss
Dr Addada says, “The magnesium part is anti-inflammatory, and inositol is anti-oxidant – hand in hand they work together to make a happier scalp. The anti-inflammatory function helps out a lot – it decreases hair loss, which can give you the opposite effect - hair growth. This is what is so beneficial about the so-called rice water.”
In fact, A 2002 study by Belgium-based researchers at the University of Brussels published in the international journal Acta Dermato-Veneorologica found that taking bath in rice water-containing water twice daily for 15 minutes led to an improvement in healing capacity of damaged skin, and also boosted skin barrier function in patients with atopic dermatitis.
• Fighting dandruff
A 2011 study published in the Journal of Phytology showed that certain types of rice water solutions that cause inhibit or stop the growth of Malassezia, a dandruff-causing fungus – and this may be because of zinc or selenium.
Potential anti-ageing
A more recent, 2018 study by Portugal-based researchers published in the international Cosmetics journal concluded that rice water can show anti-ageing effects, as when they applied it topically in a gel formula on participants for a month, their skin showed increased hydration, antioxidant activity and it inhibited the wrinkle-forming aging enzyme – elastase – that breaks down elastic fibres in your skin.
Dr Rezgui adds, “It is a natural cleanser, and also a natural barrier from UV and free radicals and very important, it also balances pH of the scalp.”
What cinched the deal for me was just how deliciously soothing applying the cool gel-like water was for my scalp – over time, any dandruff and inflammation has almost disappeared. But caution! Too much of it, or using it after another hair mask can make the hair brittle.
Safety: Can everyone use rice water?
If you have dry hair as well, Dr Rezgui recommends using rice water with caution, at most once a month as it can be more drying. She says, “Dry hair can be rapidly overloaded with protein or amino acid and it can damage the hair, cause more split ends and breakage - you also need to rinse profusely to prevent any protein overload.
“If they have very dry hair, they should improve the hydration and moisturisation of the hair and scalp first and then use maybe once a month. I do recommend it but it tends to work better for people who have normal to oily hair.” For normal and oily hair, she advises that it should be ideally once a week.
No comments
Thanks