Was all of the donor hair removed permanent hair? (photo)

The permanent zone is measured from the base of the skull a distance up of approximlately 3 inches at most. If the donor area is larger than 3 inches on the sides or back, then this hair may eventually fall out in the years to come. You have gray hair suggesting that you are probably over 50, so that might make the risk of loss less, if your recession of the hair in the back has stopped. If it did not stop, then you may see the ‘white dots‘ associated with the FUE extraction once you lose the hair on the upper fringes.

 

Donor grafts as high as 15,000, please discuss

In your assessment of my donor supply, you noted that I can bald to a Norwood 7 and still get hair. I’m not a NW7 but out of curiosity, I know different factors are involved, like head size and stuff but how many grafts would a Norwood 7 typically require for adequate coverage at an average transplant density? I know I’ve seen photos online from another doctor in California you’ve probably heard of or maybe even know (Dr. Umar), who specializes in the use of body hair grafts. Some of the Norwood 7’s he’s restored required over 15,000 grafts! One of the clients in particular, transplanted 9,000 grafts from just his beard alone! (how many follicles are even on a man’s face because he still was able to grow a beard, albeit just much less dense); the results were pretty impressive, regardless. Granted some of those clients requested really aggressive/ juvenile hairlines and had a lot of thin/single-haired grafts harvested from their back and legs which probably accounted for the need for a higher graft harvest

I wrote an article in the Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery in 2017 which discussed that almost anyone can get a full head of hair if they combine FUE with SMP. I didn’t discuss beard hair, but the use of beard hair significantly adds to the donor supply. I believe that body hair has much less value for two reasons (1) the hair is fine, and (2) the telogen cycle is long, which results in only half of the hairs growing at any one time while the other is in telogen phase.

My Donor Area Is Very, Very Thin After My 4000 FUE Surgery, Why Is That? (Photo)

4,500 FUE grafts is a high number of FUE grafts for anyone with a lower than average donor density.

If you are from India or South Asia, your donor density will not support that number of grafts and thus you have a depleted donor area.

Scalp Micropigmentation is the only solution to this problem (see: https://scalpmicropigmentation.com/scar-covering/).

Screen Shot 2018-08-22 at 7.47.15 AM

 


2018-12-01 08:09:56My Donor Area Is Very, Very Thin After My 4000 FUE Surgery, Why Is That? (Photo)

Why is my donor area red and without regrowth?

I would have to (1) know how many grafts you had taken and (2) see your same picture in another 3 months with the same hair cut. That will tell me if it is an over-harvested donor area. I would hope that the redness would be gone in a week or two.


2019-01-14 14:12:38Why is my donor area red and without regrowth?

Was My Donor Area Overharvested with 4500 Fue Grafts? (Photo)

4500 FUE grafts are most likely too many grafts for most men. The typical Caucasian’s limits are around 3600 grafts based upon an average donor density and medium weight hair. Without knowing your original donor density, I cannot tell, but I can predict that you will most likely have a see-through donor area. See: https://newhair.com/donor-area/


2018-05-16 13:17:59Was My Donor Area Overharvested with 4500 Fue Grafts? (Photo)

Donor area messed up in Turkey. How do I know who can do SMP well so I don’t make another mistake

Hi i am considering scalp micro pigmentation for an over eager fue transplant by Maralklinik in Turkey. Will post pics below for advice. It’s been 18 months since and am open to all advice. Ps I reccommend never getting a transplant. But that’s another story for another day.

Be sure you get an expert and always ask to see some of their patients that had SMP as too many providers do it poorly and the best protection you have is seeing people who had it done yourself. We offer these experiences along with hair transplants at monthly open house events held at one of our two office in Southern California. See: https://scalpmicropigmentation.com/


2019-03-26 18:18:09Donor area messed up in Turkey. How do I know who can do SMP well so I don’t make another mistake

Again the Donor Area Is Too High and Too Low (With Photo)

In these pictures, you can see the occipital notch on the scalp which is the bump about 1 1/2 inches above the bottom of the donor area which was harvested. To get numbers, for whatever reason, this patient will have non-permanent hair which will appear sometime in his future. The hair from this area is not permanent hair.


2019-02-20 08:53:35Again the Donor Area Is Too High and Too Low (With Photo)

Was My Donor Area Over-Harvested? (Photo)

Over-harvesting is a reflect of the total number of FUE grafts harvested, compared to your donor density, as defined here.

To find out if your donor area was over-harvested, ask your surgeon what your donor density was prior to the surgery. In addition, I believe that the surgeon went too low into your neck hair which is not permanent hair.


2019-03-19 07:26:59Was My Donor Area Over-Harvested? (Photo)

Has my donor area been over-harvested with 5500 grafts? (photo)

Your donor area is clearly over-harvested and this will be a problem that only scalp micropigmentation can solve, see here: https://scalpmicropigmentation.com/scar-covering/. Some doctors just don’t get it and many doctors think because they can perform a successful FUE, that they understand what they are doing. More and more doctor are entering this field today for the money, maybe good for them but not good for the victims they produce. They are not bad people, just ignorant doctors. You have to be sure that your surgeon is (1) well trained in this field, (2) have a lot of experience, (3) are actually doing the surgery and not delegating it to technicians (often for hire techs) very commonly done with the Neograft systems, and (4) meet actual patients so that you can judge the competence of the doctor through the eyes of a few patients that had it done.

To help doctors out, I wrote an article to define how a doctor can determine what is the safe limits to FUE (https://baldingblog.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=20123&action=edit) and when you get problems like this man in the picture below where he exchanged a bald top of the head for a bald back of the head, NOT A GOOD EXCHANGE!

overharvested 16