Which of the Procedures Is Better for Hair Transplant: Follicular Unit Extraction or Strip Hair Transplant? (With Video)

There is no difference between the two techniques – FUE or strip. Unless you want to wear your shave or cut your hair closely, then an FUE may be the procedure of choice.

With a good surgeon who offers both and uses modern tools, the FUE is as good as the strip surgery or visa versa.

Take a look at this video as it may help you understand the differences better: https://youtu.be/koPZdjdO4Ng


2018-06-22 05:36:56Which of the Procedures Is Better for Hair Transplant: Follicular Unit Extraction or Strip Hair Transplant? (With Video)

Procapil, Nizoral, and DHT Blockers

Dear Dr:

First, I would like to say thanks for this web site of yours. you’re one of the few sources of hair loss info that i trust. keep up the good work.

my question: what, if anything, do you know about Procapil (www.procapil.com/index/html)? there is a brand of hair care products on the market called MiN New York (www.min.com) and they all contain several DHT-blocking ingredients — copper peptides, saw palmeto, etc. — and Procapil. any thoughts on this company and their products? also, i have read some info re: Nizoral and how it may help regrow hair as well as Rogaine. is this true?

Nizoral contains a drug used to treat a variety of fungal infections of the scalp. So many people think that it is the magic shampoo for hair loss. If it is, there is far more fungal infections than I ever thought amongst the population. Many ingredients like copper peptides and saw palmetto claim DHT blocking capability, but they are poorly documented at doing just that. If saw palmetto is a DHT blocker, it is a weak one. Copper peptides are not DHT blockers.

Procapil reports that it is a patented plant complex that repairs, nourishes and prolongs the hair cycles of the telogen phase of hair growth. There are claims as well that it is a DHT blocker. In my opinion, none of this is scientific or can be substantiated to meet my standards. Again, I warn every reader that this is a ‘Buyer Beware’ business and many people make good money on promotions that may not have good scientific data presented.

Problems With FUE and Immoral Doctor Promotions

A number of patients (many under 30 years old) are coming in to our office and telling us that they only want one session of FUE transplants and don’t want more in the future, and it is because they see these advertisements on the internet that say that this is possible. Many of the doctors who do such promotions, do large numbers of FUE grafts, going into areas that they should know that these hairs will be lost over time, even though the hair is strong at the current time. Both FUE and FUT docs are involved and it shows the greed of many doctors, to get as much money from these impressionable young men who can delay the purchase of a car for hair. We try to tell these young men that what they are reading is unrealistic; however, I guess they go to the one-session docs anyway because of significant sales tactics. I am personally disgusted at this type of physician behavior and wish that at least some of these young men get the message that they are becoming victims of doctor greed. I just had an internet link to a patient who had 5000 FUE grafts from such a doctor. When reviewing his before pictures, it was obvious he was sold something that was not in his best interest. His results were very disappointing and to make matters worse, the surgery accelerated his hair loss making him worse off and significantly poorer for doing the surgery.

Problems from Fincar (Generic Finasteride)

Dr. Rassman: Fincar Caused Bizarre Problems for me-please advise. I have used 1/4 proscar daily for 8 years I decided to try Fincar for a while. Supposedly Fincar is identical to Merck’s proscar. After starting Fincar my left testicle started aching. I had read numerous about such a paid although I had not experienced it.

In 30 days of Fincar use, bare spots appeared in my beard and the hair on my left arm diminished significantly. The outer third of both eyebrows have thinned drastically and my skin has gotten dry and wrinkly. I know this all sounds crazy but it’s scary.

I went to my family doctor and he just blew me off and said Im getting old since I’m 48.

Doctor-What did the Fincar do to me? I’ve been of Fincar 3 weeks. No testicle pain. Will I return to normal? I’ve resumed the Merck proscar daily but am scared. I wish I had never touched Fincar. Please tell people to never touch the non-Merck finasteride.

Thanks

From my understanding finasteride formulations like Propecia and Proscar is still under U.S. Patent protection thereby restricting the manufacturing of this drug in companies which are under patent treaties with the United States. Generic versions of finasteride like Fincar are made by a pharmaceutical company called Cipla in India and is not available in the U.S. (although I suspect internet sales makes this possible). I am not familiar with International Patent laws so I am not qualified to comment on patent issues. I do know that foreign manufacturing of drugs are not governed by US FDA regulations, so I do not know if the formulation meets the same criteria. There is real no way for me to know if your symptoms are a direct result of taking Fincar. I also do not know about the additives and other inactive ingredients in the formulation. I am not aware that the official, U.S. brand of Propecia is associated with aching testicles or thinning eyebrows or dry, wrinkly skin. I am curious to know why you took the medication if you had read “numerous” reports that such drug will cause these problems.

Fincar may have caused your symptoms, but it may also have been coincidental. I suspect you do not want to take another chance. It is always a “buyer beware” market. Seek competent medical advice. I hope you return to “normal”


2006-04-06 11:27:23Problems from Fincar (Generic Finasteride)

What is the problem curing curable diseases? Read below

Once upon a time, the world suffered.

In 1987, 20 million people across the world were plagued by a debilitating, painful and potentially blinding disease called river blindness. This parasitic infection caused pain, discomfort, severe itching, skin irritation and, ultimately, irreversible blindness, leaving men, women and children across Africa unable to work, care for their families and lead normal lives.

But the recent discovery of a drug called ivermectin was about to change it all. Not only was ivermectin cheap and easily synthesized, but it was also a powerful cure: With only one dose a year, it was possible to completely rid patients of disease and even halt the progression toward blindness. In short, ivermectin was a miracle drug – one whose discovery would lead to Satoshi Omura and William Campbell winning the Nobel Prize in medicine in 2015.

There was no time to be wasted. Recognizing that the populations most at risk of disease were those least able to afford treatment, Merck & Co. pledged to join the fight to end river blindness. Thirty years ago this October, the pharmaceutical company vowed that it would immediately begin distributing the drug free of charge, to any country that requested it, “for as long as needed.” It was the final piece of the puzzle: an effective drug for a tragic and completely preventable disease. And we all lived happily ever after.

Only… we didn’t.

Merck’s generous offer should have been the final chapter of a brief story with an upbeat ending – the eradication of a tragic and preventable disease that had plagued humankind for centuries. But such was not the case: 30 years later, in 2017, river blindness rages on across the world, afflicting as many as 37 million people, 270,000 of whom have been left permanently blind.

Neglected tropical diseases like river blindness stand in stark contrast to those like tuberculosis, which is estimated to affect a third of the world’s population due to the increasing prevalence of highly antibiotic resistant strains.

In short, tuberculosis has stuck around because medicine has run out of drugs with which to treat it – which is why, as a molecular biologist, I am researching new ways we can finally defeat this stubborn disease.

But this only increases the urgency for river blindness and other widespread diseases for which, unlike tuberculosis, science does have effective cures – and inexpensive ones at that. Even with all the necessary tools, the world has failed to cure the curable.

Turning a blind eye

One-and-a-half billion people across the world suffer from neglected tropical diseases, a group of infectious diseases that prevail in tropical and subtropical countries lacking good health care infrastructure and medical resources. These diseases typically do not kill immediately but instead blind and disable, leading to terrible suffering, creating losses of capital, worker productivity and economic growth.

Thirteen diseases are universally recognized as neglected tropical diseases. At least eight of these diseases, including river blindness, already have inexpensive, safe and effective treatments or interventions.

For less than 50 cents per person, the United States could cure a fifth of the world’s population of these severely debilitating and unnecessary diseases. In spite of this, the United States allocates nearly as little to treating and preventing neglected tropical diseases around the world as it does to drugs for erectile dysfunction.

The forgotten fevers

Consider dracunculiasis, or Guinea worm infection, which occurs when people consume water contaminated with fleas carrying parasitic worms. The worms mature and mate inside the human body, where they can grow to be two to three feet long.

Adult females eventually emerge from painful blisters at the extremities to lay eggs in stagnant water, where offspring will infect water fleas and begin the cycle anew.

No drug exists that can cure Guinea worm, but because of a cohort of mostly privately funded public health efforts, the number of Guinea worm infections worldwide has dropped from 3.5 million in the 1980s to only 25 in 2016.

Funding from the U.S. and other countries could help in the final push to eradication, and some argue that funding from the individual countries themselves could help.

Another example, albeit more grim, is the group of soil-transmitted helminths, or worms. Roundworm, hookworm and whipworm collectively affect over a billion people across the world, all in the poorest areas of the poorest countries. All these worms infect the human intestines and can cause severe iron deficiency, leading to increased mortality in pregnant women, infants and children. Furthermore, hookworm infections in children retard growth and mental development, leading to absences from school and dramatically reduced labor productivity.

However, soil-transmitted helminths can be expelled from the body with a single pill, each of which costs only one penny. What’s more, preventing infection in the first place is completely achievable through increased awareness and sanitation.

The purse strings of nationalism

Without drastic increases in funding and public awareness, the plight of people affected by the neglected tropical diseases is unlikely to budge anytime soon.

The U.S. spends over US$8,000 per person per year on health expenditures, compared to countries in Africa that spend around $10. While this opens the door to a critique on efficiency, it’s far more indicative of the disparities in health resources.

Less than 20 percent of the world’s population lives in some of the most developed and economically high-functioning countries, including the United States – and nearly 90 percent of the world’s total financial resources are devoted to the citizens of these nations. And yet, low-income countries bear the majority of the world’s infectious disease burden. In short, the rest of the world does not suffer the same diseases the United States does, and Americans are doing little to nothing about it.

At first glance, this is not so surprising. As a whole, the world suffers – but how many neglected tropical diseases currently penetrate American borders?

Some experts predict that eliminating or controlling the neglected tropical diseases in sub-Saharan Africa alone, which shoulders over 40 percent of the global burden of neglected tropical diseases, could save the world $52 billion and over 100 million years of life otherwise lost to disease.

Conversely, some global health experts estimate that for every dollar spent on neglected tropical disease control, we get back over $50 in increased economic productivity. By increasing awareness and funding of neglected tropical disease eradication, the United States will be making one of the best global investments possible. The rest of the world has waited long enough.

Katherine J. Wu, Ph.D. Candidate in Microbiology, Harvard University


2018-01-08 01:45:56What is the problem curing curable diseases? Read below

Probable chemical burn to female who dyed her hair and then lost hair (from Reddit)

Dying the hair can, when done improperly, cause permanent hair loss from chemical burns to the hair roots. That is what it sound like from what you are discussing. I would like to see some pictures (wrassman@newhair.com) and I will give you a free private and confidential consultation. Make sure the pictures are good and show the problem you have well. Don’t be afraid to show your face if the frontal hairline is involved.

Very new here, and very confused. from tressless

Proactive about hair loss?

I’m 17 and I’ve been lurking on various blogs and forums due to hair loss paranoia. Saw a post about shedding short hairs indicating AGA, freaked out, and saw a dermatologist. They said no significant thinning (other than a few vellus hairs on the left side of the hairline, which is normal )after looking at my hair under a microscope. Any advice on proactive hair loss detection since early intervention is the key…thanks

Forget about it for a year, and if you want, follow up with the dermatologist in a year or so, that might be a good idea. Hair loss from AGA is a slow process; there will be no surprises here.

Pricing a Hair Transplant on a Sliding Scale?

Dear Dr. Rassman:

I thank you for the useful information on this blog and your ethical approach in giving honest answers even if they are not financially beneficial to your practice. My question is the following: Do you utilize a sliding scale when quoting prices for patients? For example, if a one person earns a $60,000.00 salary and if another person earns a $160,000.00 salary, would the person who earns $60,000.00 be quoted a reduced fee?

If you purchased a car, whether a Chevy or a Mercedes, the price reflects the cost to deliver a quality product… not the income of the buyer. My staff is well paid and this reflects their skills to deliver a quality service, so the entire package of labor, surgical supplies, and the costs to run a surgical practice reflect the charge to the patient. The surgeon’s fee component is actually relatively low compared to the rest of the costs for the surgeon.

So to answer your question directly, the income of the patient does not reflect the fees we charge.


2012-01-21 07:45:47Pricing a Hair Transplant on a Sliding Scale?

Previously took Propecia and had no side effects

I took propecia from 2010-2015 with no crazy side effects, but got off it when recovering from a concussion. I held onto most of my hair that I regrew for about 3 years. Now it’s starting to go really fast. If I have already taken propecia years ago, is there any reason to believe I’d get sides now? Does generic make a difference?

The generic should be no different if it is not fake. Your previous experience should be the same now


2020-09-15 12:30:21Previously took Propecia and had no side effects