Age or Stress? The Graying of Barack Obama

Known for his fitness and optimism, the president-elect shows signs of gray.

ByABC News
January 18, 2009, 8:23 AM

Jan. 19, 2009 — -- Ronald Reagan swore he had none. George W. Bush had a headful, and so did Bill Clinton -- of gray hairs, that is.

Now, President-elect Barack Obama, a day away from taking the nation's most demanding job, already shows a sprinkling of those pesky white streaks in his first official portrait, which was unveiled last week.

At 47, Obama is nearly a decade younger than his predecessor when he took the oath of office, and seems too cool and fit to let the looming presidency stress him out.

"The gray is coming quick," he reportedly said last July. "By the time I'm sworn in, I will look the part."

President Reagan famously denied that he ever dyed his lustrous locks. President Clinton's trademark shock of white followed him through two terms. And President Bush visibly aged from his first inaugural through the trauma of 9/11 and two unpopular wars.

Most medical experts say that genetics plays the largest role in determining when a person goes gray, but new research seems to back the old wive's tale that stress, indeed, can turn the head white, or at least gray. Some researchers say persistent mental or physical stress that lasts two or more years can cause premature aging of the hair.

The French say Marie Antoinette turned gray overnight when she awaited her fate with the guillotine -- a legend that at least one doctor said likely had a medical explanation. Anxiety may have made her hair temporarily fall out in a condition called telogen effluvium, leaving the pale villus -- or "baby hair" -- behind.

Obama's race for the White House was the longest in history -- nearly two years -- and many, such Dr. Anthony Gaspari, have noticed a graying around the president-elect's temples. And with an economic crisis and international conflicts at full throttle, more stress is on its way.

But, Gaspari said, "In Obama it looks genetic."

"There's a common garden variety graying of hair that is a gradual process from the death of cells on the hair follicle," Gaspari, a dermatologist from the University of Maryland Medical Center, told ABCNews.com.