2020-01-15 04:00:562019-11-05 10:20:29Man Treats Frontal Balding (From Reddit With Photo)
Dr. Rassman,
Sorry that I write you all the time. Have you read the news about the man who regrew his whole finger tip using a drug called ACell which vets use on pets. Why couldn’t this be used on humans to regrow our original DHT resistant donor supply after it is transplanted. My request might be a little far fetched but I believe someone is willing to be your guinea pig for an experiment like this. Thanks for everything you do.
I did a Google search on the subject and found this article from the Associated Press and posted to FOX News last year —Scientists Regrow Human Fingers. However, I don’t know any more than you do by reading such an article. There is no breakthrough that I can surround from the medical releases. Everything is experimental. The photos in that article showed the pulp of the finger on the palm side is what regrew. This is not a regrown finger like the examples that they gave on salamanders that grew limbs.
Like you, I read this material with great anticipation that someday we will see such breakthroughs available to us all, but I couldn’t say when that might happen. Note that the focus is not on hair, but rather on body parts and spinal injuries. That will become the first and second application that will be approved… not hair.
Ask a family member or a friend for an opinion before you jump in and do something that you might regret. There are many things that can be done for this. If you are a male over 25, a hair transplant works great. However, I always tell young men like you that “A GOOD DECISION TODAY IS A GOOD DECISION TOMORROW” so if you are under 25, be patient and wait until you know how much balding you will develop.
The “I look fine in the mirror/horrible in photos” effect — what is it?! from tressless
2017-08-22 06:47:152017-08-23 11:36:59The man in mirror sees an enormous forehead
Unfortunately, deforming or failed transplants take a big impact on people so such a story doesn’t sound outrageous. I am aware of three men who committed suicide because of hair loss, so the emotional impact of hair loss can be very severe for many men. Most men who get very emotional about their hair loss, get depression. In the days when the large plugs were put into bald men’s head, their hair transplants were deforming. Prior to the early 1990s, these large deforming plugs had no cure short of a hair system, a common solution for the time period between 1960-1990. Hair systems is something that doesn’t work for everyone but if the deformities were soo bad, a few men were driven to suicide?
Today, with the hair transplant technology commonly available, hair transplants that go wrong can be treated with a success rate of 100%. Men who find themselves in this situation, should seek a modern hair transplant doctor to help manage the deformities and a good family doctor to manage the depression. The good news is that almost 100% of men with hair loss today can get their hair back. Hair transplants are today’s miracle.
See: https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/man-47-killed-himself-after-7724486
If you have no idea what SMP is then you’re probably not going to find this interesting but I wanted to start a thread chronicling my experience of lightening/removing my scalp micro-pigmentation (hair tattoo). I had my first laser session yesterday.
My hair story is a bit of a long one but I’ll try and explain it as best as I can. Pretty much been bald since my early 20’s, always had a high forehead and it really shook my confidence (and still does unfortunately).
My GP put me on Finasteride and after trying it for a few weeks and dealing with bad sides I stopped it. In my early 20’s I went to see numerous transplant doctors who all told me that I need to wait a few years to see where the balding would end up. They also said that I probably wouldnt be too happy with the outcome of a transplant because of how much hair I had lost and having a so-so doner area. I then started to look for other solutions. I came across Scalp Micropigmentation (hair tattoo) and researched it heavily. This was 5 years ago. I had heard of ‘Tricopigmentation‘ which was branded as a semi permanent SMP option. At the time Milena Lardi in Italy was the best clinician in this field so I travelled to Milan and had 3 sessions done (after shaving my head all over for the first time).
The tricopigmentation gave me a nice shadow but I wanted more so I decided to go down the ‘permanent’ SMP route with a UK company. Again I had 3 sessions but this time it was much darker and overall I was pretty happy with it. I was not as self conscious about my shaved head as I thought it looked like I was shaving out of choice and not out of need. It was high maintenance though as I had to shave everyday and also use alot of anti-shine. Some people noticed and others didn’t. In hindsight Im not sure I was fooling anyone as I do think that many people can spot a ‘too perfect’ hairline. The eyes are naturally drawn to it, which isnt good.
Once I got to my late 20’s I decided to get a transplant to compliment the SMP. Again I researched this for quite sometime and ended up having a 4300 graft hair transplant in Turkey. This gave me texture on the scalp and also massively reduced shine (which I was delighted about) but its way too thin to grow long. The recovery was horrific and dont think id ever get another one. While the idea was that the transplant would compliment the SMP (and vica vearsa), I was left with transplant hair I cant grow very long because it makes the SMP on the scalp stand out like a sore thumb! Furthermore it really made the hairline look even more fake.
Fast forward to 2019 and I was left feeling really self conscious about my head. I do notice when people talk to me they linger just a second too long on the hairline and scalp, plus i do see some people do a double take on the street. In the end I decided my only option was either to live with it (not happening) or get the SMP lasered off (without damaging the hair). After a few months of research I went with a laser removal technician who has alot of experience with SMP.
I had my first session yesterday and so far Im pleased with the results — although it was really f***ing sore. It will take a number of weeks for the fading to happen (it doesnt happen right away) but already I’ve noticed the hairline looks a little more natural and while its still red (it looks worse in photos) I think I will be happier with it gone or faded. Less really is more.The actual hair stands out now rather than the SMP dots.
Happy to answer any questions you guys might have. 3 words of advice if you’re thinking of SMP or lasering it off for that matter:
If you’re thinking of getting SMP go with someone who has ALOT of experience and can show you photos of their work. This is very important.
LESS is more when it comes to SMP. Try and keep things as natural as possible (broken and receding hairline) — not a lego man hairline. Its really difficult to get a natural hairline, especially for lighter skin tones.
If you’re thinking of getting SMP or indeed removing SMP — Research, research, research and ask questions before committing.
Photos:
Upper left photo = SMP + Transplant hair a little longer than buzzed (before laser)
Upper right photo = 1 day post laser and buzzcut (today!)
Bottom Left = SMP before laser and transplant hair buzzed
Bottom right = 1 day post laser and buzzcut (today)
This man offers good advice. I keep mentioning the idea of a Master Plan and that is something that is critical. Had he found the right doctor at the onset, he would have been able to tackle a hair transplant when and if he wanted one. Here is a man who had the worst balding pattern possible with hair transplants followed by SMP. The photos speak to the result: https://baldingblog.com/72-year-old-surfer-still-surfing-and-he-has-hair-photo/
2019-11-04 03:36:372019-11-04 10:41:27Man had problems with his SMP (From Reddit) – with photos
I have been asked how this can happen. We are now doing extensive research into wound healing and the appearance of hair after a wound has healed. This man grew hair from the sides of his burn wound (my assessment of the photos) and this new skin brought along with it hair follicles that clearly were different than his balding follicles which had disappeared prior to the burn. In our experimental work, we have created such wounds and found hair growth not-infrequently. This is the theory behind microneedling that is now performed regularly by many men with good results. The wound created by the microneedling go down to the depth of the stem cells (1-1.5mm below the skin) and with persistent wounding, hair is stimulated through the impact on the stem cells reached by the needling. This was shown in the previous post on this blog.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1351888/pdf/bmjcred00266-0059a.pdf
2020-06-14 11:13:592020-06-14 11:14:56Man grows hair from scalp burn
It is wonderful when someone allows us to watch the progress of
their hair transplant and take the time to do it with such intention to detail.
The hair transplant changed his look!
I took a picture every day after my Hair Transplant last year, I compiled the footage in a time lapse video. If someone wishes to see how my transplanted hair grew in a year. Here’s my head 🙂 from tressless
2020-03-23 16:00:342020-03-23 16:04:33Man follows his hair transplant progress over a year (video) from Reddit
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9989033/Italian-man-mysteriously-dies-heart-attack-hair-transplant-operation-Turkey.html
I hope that when his body is home, that the cause of death will be identified. It is easy to call it a heart attack, when it could have been something else. There have been other deaths during hair transplants, one in Los Angeles was due to an overdose of an anesthetic drug, for example. Many of the Turkey clinics don’t have a doctor who understands dosing anesthesia medications.
The article reports that the body was covered with blood. The body covered with blood? That doesn’t happen with FUE unless you don’t use the right medications that contains epinephrine which constricts the blood vessels and allows clotting to occur. Maybe he bled out? Alternatively, let’s say it was a heart attack in a young man. This can happen but the surgeon (if there was one) should know how to resuscitate such a patient. This is basic stuff! Without an expert making autopsy results known, we can only guess.
2021-09-15 11:07:042021-09-16 11:03:28Man dies of a ‘heart attack” in Turkey having a hair transplant
2019-08-09 04:19:072019-03-26 18:19:22Man dies after a hair transplant in India