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About Us |
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Patient Education |
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Photo Gallery |
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The ASPS
Patient Photo Gallery currently includes
before and
after surgery pictures. |
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Hair |
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NORMAL |
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- The hairline typically begins four finger
breadths above the eyebrows.
- There are "recessions", bald areas as the
hairline moves from the midline. These create the
"part" in the hair. These recessions line up with the
corner of the eyes in their deepest parts.
- Hair density is thick enough to prevent
seeing the scalp.
- The hairline itself is irregularly,
irregular. It does not form a perfectly straight
line. The hair blends into denser areas.
COMMENT:
Personal preference has a lot to do with hair design.
Older men may feel more comfortable with a receded hairline
and thinner hair. Younger patients may request a lower
hairline.
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SELF-EVALUATION: |
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Wet your hair with alcohol
to see where it is truly dense. For hair surgeons, the
question is not just what you look like today but five and
ten years from now. The approach to a receded hairline
is very different if the hair behind it is also thin.
We look to see if the typical male pattern baldness is
expected. Your doctor will then choose a procedure
that won't leave you with an island of hair plugs five years
from now.
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Was your mother's father
(maternal grandfather) bald? If so, you will probably
loose more.
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Are you over fifty? If
you haven't lost your hair by now, you're probably
Okay.
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Place four fingers on your
eyebrows and see where your hairline begins. This
divides your face by thirds.
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HOW MUCH
CAN BE IMPROVED?
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Your doctor can't create
hair from thin air.
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Hair plugs and flaps come
from the side or back of the head. If there is dense
growth, your head can usually be completely recovered.
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The ratio between the amount
of bald skin and hair bearing skin is the most
important. The fact that the bald area has absolutely
no hair is not important.
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What do you want? If
you simply want some density in the bald areas this is
easier and requires less procedures than complete
restoration. If you have dense hair along the sides,
anything is possible.
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VARIOUS Surgeries |
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Hair Transplants
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THINNING HAIR AND MEDICAL
PROBLEMS
Both men and women have
problems with hair loss. In men, the problem often can
begin at an early age and is inherited through the
individual's maternal grandfather (mother's father).
Male pattern baldness usually begins with loss in the front
and can progress through stages until the entire mid-section
of the head is bald.
The treatment of baldness
depends on the doctor's and patient's ability to guess at what
the natural outcome of the baldness will be. For
instance, correcting a hair line at the front edge may prove
an embarrassment a few years later if progressive baldness has
left a small island of hair plugs. The doctor and the
patient must plan on the inevitable future in regards to hair
loss.
Many underlying diseases
can cause hair loss, particularly when it occurs in
inappropriate places like facial hair or body hair. If
there is any question that the problem may be caused by a
special health problem, a medical evaluation is
appropriate. Diseases such as thyroid imbalances and
bacterial infections in the skin commonly cause hair loss that
is easily reversible and it would be a pity to miss a quick
cure.
Unfortunately, the most
common situation is hereditary, male pattern baldness.
This usually begins with thinning of the hair. Essentially the
hair follicle becomes dormant and will no longer
respond. Hairs that stop growing with age are sensitive
to a particular form of testosterone but this information
doesn't help.
On a practical level,
there are many products on the market that can assist with
thinning of hair. There are potions, lotions, and
restoratives, many that simply act by cleaning out the hair
follicle which stimulates hair growth, to the extent that even
plain alcohol can stimulate hair growth. Under careful
scrutiny, you should be aware that 40% improvement in hair
growth is expected for any medicine that you try, no matter
what it is.
Some medicines that will
stimulate hair growth for thinning hair are definitely
valuable. Minoxidil, was actually stumbled upon as an
oral medication to treat cancer. Although its side
effects were unacceptable, it produced dramatic hair growth in
many patients.
When Minoxidil is applied
to the skin, its effectiveness is not nearly as dramatic or
predictable as it was in a pill form. In several studies,
Minoxidil has been shown to be no more effective than placebo;
and in the vast majority of cases, where some effect was
attributed to the medicine, this effect was a moderate
thickening of areas with hair, but little growth in truly bald
places. The amount of growth obtained from Minoxidil
would never match the density of hair generated by a session
of hair transplants.
When hair density is
significantly reduced or hair is completely lost in an area,
present medicines cannot restore new hair. Some people
don't choose to do anything but for those who wish to restore
their hair, here are the common options.
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Hair
Pieces |
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Pre-operative View |
Post-operative View |
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One should be aware that
hair pieces have improved dramatically and now are made with
very carefully matched hair and may even be held in place with
stitches. These custom hair pieces are sold at hair
replacement centers and may work well for the person who does
not mind frequent hair maintenance and realizes that the
system will eventually degenerate. When stitches are
placed in the scalp to hold down a hair piece, scars can form
from the traction of these sutures and can create a problem in
the future if the hair piece is not worn.
To some extent, the degree
and area of baldness dictates the possibilities. On one end of
the spectrum, patients who are severely bald are not surgery
candidates and can only choose a hairpiece of some kind.
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Hair Plugs |
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Pre-operative
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Post-operative
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What is exciting about
treating hair loss is the great variety of new surgical
options that can restore a natural hair line and a full head
of hair in the motivated patient. The simplest,
time-honored, and safest has been hair plugs.
In the past, a three
millimeter round punch was used to remove a plug from the
hair-bearing rear of the scalp and place it in the bald
area. In each session, several hundred plugs would be
transferred in rows and subsequent sessions would then fill in
the spaces in between.
This process has been
fine-tuned over recent years with the advent of the
MINIGRAFTS and
MICROGRAFTS. Minigrafts and micrografts
are smaller slices of the same hair plug that contain fewer
hairs. THEREFORE, THEY ARE SIMPLY SMALLER HAIR
PLUGS.
A MINIGRAFT is made by
dividing a 3- or 4-millimeter plug into fourths to make
smaller plugs with about 6 or 7 hairs each.
A MICROGRAFT is made by
actually slicing one or two hair follicles from the edge of a
plug. This is delicate and time-consuming work.
In a typical session, the
doctor may harvest about 200 to 400 plugs of various sizes and
place these into the bald areas. A session will take
about four or five hours total. Usually transplants will
remain dormant for a few months and then begin to grow.
After about six or eight months, the results are fairly
clear. In subsequent sessions, the doctor will then fill
in the spaces between these grafts.
Some doctors have
assembled large teams of assistants and arrange for sessions
with 1000 minigrafts and micrografts. The sessions lasts
seven or eight hours but they can get light coverage over the
entire head in one session. Unfortunately, they still
never achieve dense hair growth with this technique but they
reduce the need for many repeated sessions.
By intermixing minigrafts
and micrografts with the larger plugs, in many cases a truly
natural hair line can be achieved. Each doctor who performs
hair plugs may offer a different formula for hair
restoration. Usually the formula depends on the
individual's degree and pattern of hair loss as well as the
ability to pay for the services. Remember that doctors
can't create hair out of thin air! There may be a limit
to donor areas in some patients or other restrictions.
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HAIR FLAPS
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The second category of
hair transplant procedures are called HAIR FLAPS. These
procedures involve transferring a large piece of hair-bearing
skin to a bald area. One common flap was designed
by a doctor named Juri in Brazil about twenty years ago.
The Juri Flap comes from the side of the scalp and is rotated
to create a thick hair line. Later, a second flap from
the opposite side can be taken as needed to fill in the back
area of baldness. Eventually, the bald skin can be
removed to completely cover the head with thick, permanent
hair! Ultimately, this produces a dramatic restoration
of hair! The donor area usually closes with a thin
hidden scar.
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The skin flap is usually an
inch or two wide and seven or eight inches long, but can be
adjusted in size depending on the area that needs
coverage. The main step in the procedure, the rotation
of the flap, requires a recovery period that is equivalent to
a facelift. Associated with the rotation of the flap may
be several small surgeries.
Afterwards it may be
valuable to improve the hairline and fill in several corners
using micro- and minigrafts but in these cases only small
numbers of grafts are needed. The other type of flap comes
from the thick hair in the back of the head and involves
raising an artery in the front of the scalp. This is a
very delicate procedure and usually requires the patient to
spend a few days in the hospital to recover. Usually, a
strip of hair-bearing skin that is approximately two inches
wide is removed from the back of the head and brought to the
front with the blood vessel that supply the blood to the skin
being re-sewn to blood vessels in the front of the
head. Again touch up procedures may be required to
produce a truly natural hair line. The advantage of this
procedure is that it is one surgical step and avoids several
smaller touch up procedures of the Juri flap from the side of
the head. |
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PLUGS VERSUS
FLAPS
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The doctors who do plugs,
including the minigrafts and micrografts, often feel that the
hair after a flap surgery looks too dense and the hairline is
unnatural.
Likewise, the doctors who
do flaps feel that plugs are sparse and unnatural. The
advantage of the flaps is that they provide thick hair with
NORMAL DENSITY IN ONE STEP. The average hair flap is the
equivalent of 2000 micrografts, a density that can rarely be
achieved with plugs, only after many sessions.
Each procedure has its
inconveniences and costs, and each patient must judge these
for themselves. Flaps are surgery and have a more
significant recovery at the time of the procedure. Plugs
are more of an ongoing process but carry less risk and time
off work.
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SCALP REDUCTIONS
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The bald area of scalp may
be reduced (cut out) to help reduce the amount of area that
needs coverage. Overall, the results of routine scalp
reduction have been disappointing. Although the removal
of 2 or 3 cm. of bald skin in a loose scalp may be
successfully accomplished, this may create a noticeable scar
after the area has healed and the overall impression of
baldness remains. A phenomenon known as a STRETCH BACK,
in which eventually the bald skin stretches to again take back
the same dimensions, is fairly common.
Some doctors routinely
combine scalp reductions to their graft sessions. Be
aware that the before and after pictures they show you are
their best ones.
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SCALP
LIFTING
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Several doctors offer a
procedure known as scalp lifting, where a large area of skin
on the back of the neck is freed up and pulled
superiorly. This can dramatically improve the results
compared to a routine scalp reduction. In terms of the
hair-bearing flap that may be used to cover the bald head,
this procedure can produce the most dramatic and long-lasting
results, unequaled by anything that can be done with
transplants or scalp reductions.
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SCALP
EXPANSION
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Another procedure that is
in the plastic surgeon's bag of tricks is SCALP
EXPANSION. In this case, a balloon is placed underneath
the area of skin with hair and gradually filled up with water
to stretch the skin. The balloon is filled over about 10
weeks and looks like a big tumor in the head by the end of the
process! However, a large area of bald skin can be
removed and comfortably replaced by the expanded skin.
The hair density is reduced, but usually not noticeably.
There are several
advantages to expansion. The recovery after surgery is not as
bad as a regular flap, because the skin has already been
prepared. There is little risk of hair loss for the same
reason. The entire donor area of the scalp can be
utilized in one procedure to reduce bald skin, whereas other
flaps only cover part of the scalp or require several steps.
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WHAT TECHNIQUE IS
FOR ME?
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Plan for the future! If
hair plugs are placed in the front of someone who eventually
loses their hairline, the result may be very
disappointing and revisions may be necessary.
In regards to the hair
result you want, there is no one absolute choice either.
Older patients tend to prefer the relatively thinner hair line
produced by plugs compare to flaps and some people consider
the hair line produced by flaps too dense and likewise
unnatural. Younger patients who want thick hair
for a lifetime, tend to enjoy flaps more.
The state of the donor
site (the place where the grafts are coming from) is a
critical consideration for any technique. No surgeon can
create hair that is not there. If the sides of the head are
thin, a flap from that area is not possible, leaving plugs as
the only choice. If the bald area is a relatively small
portion of the scalp, many techniques may produce an adequate
result.
Some patients prefer the
gradual restoration of hair produced by multiple plug sessions
to the relatively startling restoration of hair that occurs
immediately with flap surgery. On the other hand, some
patients prefer the thick, dense hair that is generated in a
single step with flap surgery that cannot be matched with
plugs. After plugs are placed, they routinely lose the
hair for several months before it re-grows so don't be
surprised about this. Keep in mind that scalp reduction
surgery that fails may leave scars in the scalp that can be
difficult to deal with.
Do not be swayed by the
very extensive marketing that occurs amongst hair
surgeons. Choose a technique that is right for you.
If you can't decide, wear a hair piece until you are
sure! Be sure that you are not happy with the status quo
and you want to do something before going for consultations.
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HAIR
COMPLICATIONS
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HAIR PLUGS
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FAKE
APPEARANCE: Especially in the early sessions, the grafts
tend to have a "row of corn" look. Later, your doctor
can fill in the spaces. Minigrafts and micrografts may
help resolve this as well.
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POOR DENSITY
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LOSS OF GRAFTS: Only some
percent of the grafts will grow, usually close to 90% or
95%.
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POOR DIRECTION: Although
the surgeon tries to set the direction of the plug when they
insert it, the graft is still placed in an ill-fitting
pocket and may not cooperate.
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CHANGE IN HAIR
TEXTURE: Many transplant surgeons remark that the hair
that regrows from plugs often doesn't have the same texture
and quality of the donor site. No one knows exactly
why.
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UNNATURAL HAIRLINE: A
grafted hairline may be two sharp or
thick.
HAIR
FLAPS
- LOOKS FAKE/TOO DENSE
- SCARS: Wherever the scalp is cut, it will
leave a scar. With good technique, these scars can be
very fine. The incision may be designed so that hair
grows through the scar.
- DENSE HAIRLINE:
The sharp edge of the
flap may produce an "edge of the forest" that looks fake.
- POOR DIRECTION:
Depending on the flap
design, the hair direction may not be ideal. Ask your
doctor.
- FLAP DEATH: Severe death of the flap,
where all is lost, is rare if precautions are taken.
It is manageable if it occurs, so don't panic. It will
necessitate additional surgery and you'll be wearing a
baseball cap for a while.
- HEMATOMA/INFECTION:
Hair flaps are
surgical procedures that carry these common risks.
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New Page 1
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About Surgery |
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Areas of
surgery |
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Planning your surgery |
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