The daughter of Kyle Richards, Sophia Umansky, amazed fans with graphic hair loss images after taking a drug as loss of weight.
“I am very lucky to have so much hair, because at the rate that I lost my hair, I will be bald in about a week,” said brunette beauty during a tiktok on Wednesday.
“I started Mounjaro about four months ago, and I would say that maybe in the past three weeks to a month, I noticed a dramatic situation of hair loss,” she said.
Sophia is the third daughter of the star of “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills”, and the second daughter of three that Richards shares with her distant husband, Mauricio Umansky.
Although she wore her long shiny hair around her shoulders for the clip, she had shocking images for her disciples.
“I’m just going to show you a quick video of what my hair loss looks like, and it’s every day,” said the personality “Buying Beverly Hills”, 25. “And you don’t even see half.”
She proceeded to show tufts of hair around the drain and to stick to the walls of her shower, explaining that the reality is “much worse” that it seems because the video shows only before and after her showers.
She demonstrated that when she pulled her hand in her hair during the day, “heaps” of hair came out.
Sophia explained that she does not think that extreme hair loss is a “direct result of the drug”.
“I think it is the direct result of rapid weight loss because of the medication, and not to eat enough vitamins, proteins, all of these kinds of things.”
She added that she “put an effort” by taking vitamins and eating proteins to correct the problem.
Sophia told her fans that to fight hair loss, she also uses OMI hair growth peptides and has taken collagen as well as Grüns vitamins.
His disciples had mixed reactions in the thread of the comments.
“Oh Noooo is too baby of hair loss,” exclaimed a fan in part, while another commented: “It’s disturbing to see the amount falling.”
Others praised Sophia for being honest about her problem with hair loss. “Bravo to be transparent,” wrote a fan, with another suggesting, “protein protein protein”.
However, others suggested seeing a doctor. “Please have your thyroid checked … Probably an obvious answer, but these problems can be not diagnosed for a long time,” said a follower.