High Blood Pressure and Hair Loss During 1 Week of Minoxidil Use – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi,
I had a little thinning in my crown area, so I decided to use minoxidil. I am 43 male, and I don’t really have genetic balding, but I have a lot of thinning. Anyways, I used minoxidil for about a week, and then I discontinued use because I had a higher blood pressure. During the use of the minoxidil, it has seemed that I have lost some hair in my crown area, and I was just wondering if it should grow back if I just leave it alone, or should I start using it again, even if I have some side effects.

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I doubt that the minoxidil did any damage to your hair. Usually people that have blood pressure problems will report a drop in blood pressure. Minoxidil is a known hypotensive agent, originally discovered for control of blood pressure. Decisions to go back on the medication must be your own. As I have not examined you, I am not in a position to answer that part of your question.

Micro/Mini Graft Technique? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

dr. rassman,

i found a clinic and the surgeon is listed on ishrs.org…HOWEVER…his technique is called the “[name removed] micro/mini graft” technique. is this a something i should do or should i look elsewhere. how does this differ from the FUE technique?? thanks so much.

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The standards of care have been published, and Follicular Unit Transplantation (FUT) is the standard for hair transplantation. That means that the hair is taken exactly as they grow — no clumps of hair are used. The micro/mini graft technique is an old, abandoned approach. The last time it was the standard of care was in the mid-1990s. I read the website of the doctor you referenced and I think that he is about 10 years behind.

Average British Woman Spends Big Money On Her Hair – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

The following is a note sent from a patient of mine who reads BaldingBlog from time to time.

I hope things are well with you! I happened to see the following article today, that was linked up on the Drudge Report, and I thought perhaps you might want to share it with your “Baldingblog.com” readers:

“The average British woman spends an astonishing £36,903.75 on her hair in a lifetime, according to new research. She will spend the equivalent of just under two YEARS of her life washing, styling, cutting, colouring, crimping and straightening her locks in salons or at home.”

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Wow, that’s over $70,000 US! I wonder what the statistics are for men (hair transplants excluded). I also wonder how this may differ from the average US woman. Any thoughts by my readers?

Stopped Taking Propecia, Then Restarted and Its Not Working! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I wrote on here before because I was distressed about my rapid hair loss beginning in June. I am just 18 and had been on Propecia for normal MPB since December. In May, I stopped for three weeks because it was so expensive but then I decided I had to get back on it. In June, and still up to now, my hair began to fall out very fast and easily. I have telogen effluvium, diagnosed by my dermatolgoist (I had a bad viral infection with a high fever in March) and evident by the white bulbs at the end of the hairs. But the hair is falling out only from the top of my head, and I am otherwise a healthy male. I am wondering, could stopping the Propecia for that short period could be causing this bout of TE? I’m still taking the drug now and noticing hardly any new growth. Many thanks

Stopping Propecia when it is working is never a good idea, because you lose some of its value. Usually, three weeks is not enough to lose full value, but you must stay the course and keep on the medication. You will not know for a good 8 months if you’ve achieved your goals.

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Staples or Sutures? What are the Pros and Cons? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Dear Dr.Rassman,
I have been reading your blog for quite sometime and have a high regard for your opinions.
I’m considering a transplant and I have a question regarding the scar closure methods different doctors use. I have read they could use staples, sutures and dissolvable sutures. Could you please discuss the pros and cons of the three different methods. In your surgeries which would you prefer and why.

Thanks a lot for your time in advance.

I would have to write a textbook on the logic that distinguishes why one may be better than the others. Essentially, I use them all in different circumstances. I do prefer staples much of the time, because it is fast for the surgery and the staples allow blood to go between them, which in theory gives more blood supply to the skin edge. Sutures have a tendency to constrict the skin along the skin edge when they are use in a baseball type of way.

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Old Plugs Now Showing – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I am 43 years old and had a procedure done 15 years ago involving mini grafts and micro grafts. Over the years it was fine and as I had a full head of hair and never really noticed the minis and micro grafts much.

Since last year I have lost some hair and the minis are now the transplants are more obvious to me. I have been very stressed, my wife left me and the hair started to fall out shortly after she left. I am not on propecia or rogaine or any other such drugs.

What can I do? With my hairline now looking pluggy and less and less hair to cover it, will a transplant help me? I am reluctant to have a transplant again as I am frightened that my pluggy look will be worse. Can I just remove these plugs and take on the bald look that I would have had normally?

Here’s my questions…

  1. Most of my grafts are middle size (about 1-2 mm in size). If I go with the FUE approach to thinning these grafts, how small are the holes created by FUE ?
  2. Are different sized instruments used ?
  3. What is the exact process ?
  4. How are these holes closed (sutures? ) and how long is the healing ?
  5. Do these holes upon closing leave a white spot like the pictures I have seen ?
  6. Some of my grafts are small 1-2 hairs but stand out (i think its the skin around is a little pushed in) ,doing this procedure will take care of the skin depression/irregularity ?
  7. What is the success of such procedures & What can I expect in terms of the look after this process ?
  8. I would like these grafts to be replanted on the top or in the scar area.
  9. Can you please tell me about this process and advise if what I am looking for is achievable ?

It is not unusual for people to see the older plugs when they lose hair. This is because many doctors would put plugs (in the old days) into places where hair existed as a prevention for hair loss or to cover a person’s eventual hair loss migration. This was and is today a terrible and immoral practice. I feel you have a series of options:

  • You can put back the hair that has hidden the plugs and go back in time, so to speak.
  • You can remove the plugs altogether. This will not bring you to look like the balding man you would have become, because the plugs tend to leave scarring and even removing them does not change the scarring.
  • You can remove the frontal plugs, thin out the plugs behind and redistribute the hair, and then transplant the entire frontal area.
  • You can lower the hairline very slightly and in doing this, you can add a deep transition zone which will bury the larger grafts that you have.

Now to answer your numbered questions…

  1. The diameter of the punch is 0.9mm.
  2. None smaller at this time
  3. Usually it is best to use a two step procedure — score the skin first, and then use a dull punch second to core out the targeted FUs.
  4. These are not sutures; too small. They are left open and close on their own.
  5. This is a risk. The small white patches are far less obvious than the plugs. The lesser of two evils.
  6. Yes, in most of them, provided that they are not the larger grafts that had hair killed off during the transplant. There is a condition called donuting where much of the central hair dies in the older type of grafts. The skin changes with this older technique frequently are larger than just where the hair are.
  7. For each group of hairs that are successfully removed, the success is good. Please note that I used the term successfully removed. Sometimes the scars that surround the plugs make it impossible to get them either out at all, or completely out. Every person is different, as is each scar.
  8. Always do this.
  9. It can be achieved, but without examining you and testing you with a FOX biopsy or trying it, one can not be 100% sure.

For an example of the procedure, please see Dean’s Story.

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Hair Dye – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I would like to know the safest brand of hair dye that could be used without damaging or aggrevating hair fall.

This information is best obtained from a good hair stylist. I do not dye hair, so I do not know the answer to this with any authority.

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