Lash & Brow Anatomy — The Biology Behind Healthier Lashes and Fuller Brows
Lash & Brow Anatomy
The Biology Behind Healthier Lashes and Fuller Brows
By Dr. Susan Lin, M.D. — Inventor on US Patent 8,206,695 | Reviewed May 2026
The short answer
Lashes and brows have fundamentally different anatomy from scalp hair: shorter growth cycles, different follicle density patterns, greater vulnerability to mechanical trauma, and proximity to the ocular surface (which makes safety paramount in any product designed to support them). This hub explains the biology of lash and brow growth, the most common causes of thinning, the ocular safety considerations behind a physician-formulated conditioner, and the science behind drug-free peptide conditioning.
I am the inventor on US Patent 8,206,695 (Eyelash Enhancement Composition and Method of Treatment) and lead author of the peer-reviewed clinical study on MD Lash Factor published in the Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy in 2008. The clinical and patent work behind the MD lash and brow products informs everything in this guide.
How to use this knowledge center
- Want to understand lash growth cycle and biology → Lash Anatomy & Growth Cycle Guide
- Concerned about thinning brows → Brow Thinning Causes & Treatment Guide
- Want lash safety information → see the ocular safety section below
- See safety dossier and study answers → jump to the Lash & Brow FAQ below
Lash anatomy — the essentials
How many lashes do you have?
The average adult has approximately 90-160 lashes on the upper lid and 75-80 on the lower lid per eye. Distribution: 5-6 rows on the upper lid, 3-4 rows on the lower lid. Total: roughly 200-300 lashes per eye when healthy.
The lash growth cycle
Unlike scalp hair (which spends most of its time growing), lashes spend most of their cycle resting:
- Anagen (growth): 30-45 days
- Catagen (regression): ~15 days
- Telogen (rest then shed): ~100 days
- Total cycle: 4-11 months
- Anagen ratio: only 35-40% of lashes in growth at any moment (vs 85-90% for scalp hair)
This means visible lash improvement takes longer to manifest than scalp hair changes. Daily consistent use over 12-16 weeks is the realistic timeline for a complete cycle assessment.
Lash follicle structure
Lash follicles are specialized: they are angled to grow upward and outward, have larger sebaceous glands proportionally than scalp hair, and are located very close to the ocular surface. The proximity to the eye is what makes ocular safety the defining feature of any product designed to support lash health.
Brow anatomy — the essentials
How many brow hairs do you have?
The average adult has approximately 250-500 hairs per brow, with the density highest at the center (above the eye) and tapering toward the outer tail. Brow hairs grow at an angle that gives the brow its shape.
The brow growth cycle
Brow hairs cycle similarly to lashes: short anagen phase (4-5 months) and long telogen phase. Complete regrowth after damage or removal can take 4-6 months at minimum, with maximal density restoration over 9-12 months. Follicles that have been chronically over-tweezed for years may not fully regrow.
Why some brow thinning is permanent
Brow follicles can be permanently damaged by years of over-tweezing, certain medical treatments (chemotherapy, radiation), autoimmune conditions (frontal fibrosing alopecia, alopecia areata), or chronic mechanical trauma. Severely scarred follicles will not regrow even with optimal care.
Common causes of lash and brow thinning
| Cause | Lash impact | Brow impact |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanical trauma (curlers, eye rubbing, harsh makeup removal) | Major | Minor |
| Over-tweezing or waxing | N/A | Major (can be permanent) |
| Hypothyroidism | Moderate | Major (outer third of brow classically thins) |
| Aging | Gradual reduction | Gradual reduction |
| Alopecia areata | Can affect | Can affect |
| Telogen effluvium (postpartum, stress, illness) | Common | Common |
Ocular safety — why it matters for lash products
Because lash follicles sit just millimeters from the cornea, conjunctiva, and lacrimal duct, ocular safety is the defining feature of any responsibly formulated lash product.
MD Lash Factor is built around this principle. The patented formula (US Patent 8,206,695) is supported by an extensive independent safety dossier. In the peer-reviewed clinical study published in the Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy in 2008 (PMID: 18569264, DOI: 10.1080/14764170802054138), MD Lash Factor was demonstrated to:
- Lengthen and densify lashes in a statistically significant manner over 4 weeks
- Show zero impact on visual acuity
- Show zero impact on the lens, lacrimal ducts, or intraocular pressure
- Be safe for contact lens wearers and sensitive eyes
This is the safety profile I formulated for. As a board-certified physician, I would not use — or recommend to my own patients — a lash product that compromised ocular safety for cosmetic gain.
Lash & Brow Frequently Asked Questions
Safety dossier, study results, daily-use guidance, and physician answers — all sourced from peer-reviewed and independent clinical research.
MD Lash Factor — Studies & Safety
Has MD Lash Factor been published in a peer-reviewed clinical trial?
What did the published MD Lash Factor study show?
Has MD Lash Factor been independently tested for skin irritation?
Has MD Lash Factor been tested for skin sensitization?
Has MD Lash Factor been screened for genotoxicity?
Has MD Lash Factor been tested for ocular irritation in contact lens wearers and people with sensitive eyes?
Has MD Lash Factor been reviewed under EU cosmetic safety standards?
Is the science behind MD Lash Factor referenced in cosmetic-science textbooks?
Why is MD Lash Factor considered one of the most rigorously studied lash conditioners on the market?
Is MD Lash Factor recommended by physicians?
MD Lash Factor — Daily Use & Special Situations
Can MD Lash Factor be used after eye surgery or while using prescription eye drops?
Is MD Lash Factor safe to use during pregnancy or while breastfeeding?
What should I do if MD Lash Factor accidentally gets into the eye?
Can MD Lash Factor be used with lash extensions or after a lash lift?
MD Brow Conditioning Serum — Studies & Use
Has MD Brow Conditioning Serum been studied in a clinical trial?
What did the 56-day MD Brow study show?
Was the brow study conducted by an independent lab?
What makes MD Brow Conditioning Serum well-tolerated for daily use?
Can MD Brow help over-tweezed brows recover?
Does MD Brow help with menopausal brow thinning?
Is MD Brow safe for sensitive skin?
How long until I see results with MD Brow?
The MD scientific approach to lash and brow care
For lashes — MD Lash Factor
MD Lash Factor: physician-formulated daily conditioner. Patented (US 8,206,695), peer-reviewed for safety and efficacy, ophthalmologist-tested. Safe for contact lens wearers and sensitive eyes.
For brows — MD Brow Conditioning Serum
MD Brow: dermatologist-tested daily serum applied once nightly.
In the 56-day clinical study, 78% of users agreed brows seemed thicker and more conditioned; 87% reported healthier, more hydrated-looking brows. 87% experienced no irritation.
About the author
Dr. Susan Lin, M.D. is a board-certified physician in Obstetrics & Gynecology and Anti-Aging Medicine. She is the inventor on US Patent 8,206,695 (Eyelash Enhancement Composition and Method of Treatment) and lead author of the peer-reviewed clinical study on MD Lash Factor published in the Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy in 2008 (PMID: 18569264). She authored Part 3.3.5 — Eyelashes: Anatomy and Conditioners for Increasing Length and Fullness/Thickness (pp. 480–486) and Part 3.8 — Feminine Rejuvenation (pp. 549–560) in Harry's Cosmeticology, 9th Edition. Additional published works on hair and skin science include articles in The National Hair & Skin Journal (Fall 2012), The Link — American Hair Loss Council (2013), and Euro Cosmetics (April 2017).
Educational only; not a substitute for individualized medical advice.
