Skin & Hair in Midlife: Your Practical Guide

Perhaps you know this moment in front of the mirror: You actually feel full of energy, yet your face suddenly looks tired. Your skin feels tight even though you just applied cream. Fine lines seem to have deepened overnight, and your hair, once easy to manage, suddenly feels dry, much thinner, or brittle.

If these changes irritate you, take a deep breath: It is not a sign of neglect, and you are not doing anything wrong. It is biology. During menopause, the rules of your body change – and that is why your care routine may change as well. To truly make your skin and hair glow in this phase of life, your old moisturizer is no longer enough. We need to look deeper.

A preliminary important thought: Not all women find these changes distressing. Love yourself as you are – and let yourself be loved. But if you want to slow these changes as much as possible with targeted action, then read on.

1. The Shift: What Is Happening to Your Skin and Hair Right Now

Before we move on to solutions, it is important to understand why what worked at 30 is no longer sufficient today. Your body is undergoing a hormonal restructuring that directly affects your outer appearance.

Your Skin Is Suddenly “Thirsty”

Estrogen is your most important hormone for plump skin. It stimulates the production of collagen and hyaluronic acid and ensures that moisture is bound in the cells. As estrogen levels decline, the skin loses up to 30% of its collagen within the first five years after menopause. The result: Cell regeneration slows down, the skin becomes measurably thinner, more sensitive, and loses elasticity. The natural protective barrier – your acid mantle – also weakens, which is why moisture evaporates more quickly and pollutants can penetrate more easily.

Your Hair Roots Are “Hungry”

Not only the density but also the structure changes; hair often becomes frizzy, dull, or unruly. As estrogen declines, the body’s own male hormones (androgens) become relatively more dominant. This can weaken the hair root and shorten the lifespan of each individual hair. In addition, the sebaceous glands on the scalp now produce fewer oils – the natural “conditioner” that once kept your hair supple is missing. The hair’s cuticle layer becomes roughened.

2. The Invisible Aging: Bone and Fat

Changes do not only occur on the surface. To counteract them meaningfully, one must understand the three-dimensional nature of the face. When women say they suddenly look “tired” or “sunken,” it is usually due to the following factors:

The Gender Gap: While male skin and bones age relatively linearly, women often experience rapid breakdown in the lower half of the face after 50. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) can not only relieve hot flashes but also significantly slow bone and structural loss in the face. Since your foundation has changed, we now need routines that actively force your cells to work.

3. Your Skincare Protocol: The “Non-Negotiables”

Forget overly complicated routines. Science shows that you only need a few highly effective steps.

☀️ Your Morning Routine (Protection & Prevention)

🌙 Your Evening Routine (Repair & Cell Renewal)

Deep Dive Retinoids: The Right Choice

  1. Tretinoin (retinoic acid): The gold standard for maximum effectiveness, but prescription-only. Usually starting at 0.025%.
  2. Retinaldehyde: The best over-the-counter alternative. It requires only one conversion step to the active acid and is very effective with good tolerability (ideally start at 0.05%).
  3. Retinol & Adapalene: For beginners or sensitive skin. Retinol (approx. 0.25%) is milder because it requires several conversion steps. Adapalene is considered particularly low-irritation.
  4. Not recommended: Pure retinyl esters (e.g., retinyl palmitate), as they are usually too weak against photoaging.

Application & Combination

4. Roadmap to Full Hair: When the Root Is “Hungry”

Hair loss or structural hair changes are often warning signals of perimenopause. Since the root is one of the most metabolically active tissues, it needs support from inside and outside.

5. Medical Special Topics: Eyes, Inflammation, and Acne

The Mystery of Dry Eyes

Burning eyes during menopause are often due to androgen deficiency (testosterone). The Meibomian glands on the eyelid need testosterone to produce the oily protective layer of the tear film. Without it, the water evaporates immediately.

Cystic Acne & Late-Onset Acne

Sudden deep, painful nodules (often on the chin) are usually hormonally triggered. Since scarring is a risk, creams are often not sufficient. Isotretinoin (oral retinoid) or photodynamic therapy are the treatments of choice.

The Gut-Skin Axis (Rosacea & Redness)

An inflamed gut is reflected in the face. When the microbiome is out of balance, redness or couperose develops.

6. In-Office Treatments: When Creams Reach Their Limits

7. Exclusive: Your “Skin & Hair” Lab Checklist

Take this list to your next doctor’s appointment to achieve not just the “normal” range, but the optimum:

Parameter

Target Value / Meaning

Ferritin (iron stores)

> 40–70 ng/ml. If the battery is empty, the body reduces supply to the hair.

Vitamin D3

40–60 ng/ml. Controls the hair growth cycle and regulates the skin’s immune system.

TSH (thyroid)

1.0–2.0 mU/l. A value that is too high (underactive thyroid) leads to dry skin and hair loss.

Omega-3-Index

> 8%. Ensures supple cell membranes and helps against dry eyes and inflammation.

Hormone Status

Check estradiol & progesterone to determine the balance of female hormones.

Androgens

Testosterone & DHEA-S. Excess leads to facial hair growth with simultaneous scalp hair loss.

Androstanediol Glucuronide

Makes the hidden, aggressive conversion of testosterone (DHT) directly at the root visible.

SHBG

The “hormone taxi.” Shows how much free (active) hormone is actually available to your skin.

Cell Building Blocks

Zinc, selenium, vitamin B12 & biotin. Essential for the rapid cell division of skin and hair.

Let's talk

Book an introductory call to find out how Evela Health can help your organization