Treat a Norwood 7 with Scalp and Body Hair Transplants? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Is it possible to treat a Norwood 7 (not a head full of hair but a decent result) using Hair Transplant + Body Hair Transplant?

Thank you!

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At NHI, we do not recommend body hair transplants (BHT), as the results are highly variable and unpredictable.

We do have patients in our Photo Galleries that were Norwood 7 and had great hair transplant results from using scalp hair, but I must point out to the readers curious about hair restoration that every patient is different and the fullness will never be over the entire scalp. It’s about creating the illusion of a full head of hair by using the available donor hair efficiently. You just need to have a clear understanding of what “decent” result you are expecting.

Hair Loss InformationEltroxin and Female Hair Loss? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Does Eltroxin used for hypothyroidism cause hair loss. I am 47 yrs old and have menopause. Does low estrogen level cause hair loss. Will I need to take some preparation of Estrogen to prevent hair loss?

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Eltroxin (levothyroxine) is known to cause hair loss in some, though it is usually temporary (see side effects).

Low estrogen can also cause hair loss. You should talk to your doctor about these issues.

I Had My FUE Done Over a Year Ago and It Is Still Not Fully Grown – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Dr

I went thru my fue 15mths ago. Today i am still feeling some stubbles (transplanted graft) on the recipient area. These stubbles do not seems to be growing. Is there a possibility that newly transplanted graft stays as stubble – do not fall off neither grow out and become healthy hair? Or am i just a slow grower?

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While it is possible, is highly unlikely that you will start finally seeing growth at 15 months. You should have seen most growth at about 6 to 12 months following your surgery.

More importantly, the new hair growth will not appear as coarse stubble (like a beard). It’ll start off fine and grow as the months go by. Sometimes the stubble can be remnants of the original hair grafts that never fell out, but are just stuck in its place. You can test this by having someone find these stubbles and pulling on them with tweezers… or if you can reach it yourself, you can do this yourself. If the stubble is a dead hair shaft (old leftover follicle from 15 months ago), it should slide / slip right out.

The implication of this is that the surgery may have been a failure. Have you talked to your surgeon for a follow-up since your procedure?

I’m 16 and My Doctor Prescribed Propecia – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hey, I am a 16 years old and I have started to notice that I am losing my hair. My doctor has prescribed me propecia and I have been on it for almost 2 months now. I have noticed that a lot of hair has been falling out recently but I have heard this is common with propecia. Is this true?

I was also wondering if you have heard of anyone of my age who has been successful with propecia, since it is meant for people who are 18 and older. I’m not really looking to grow more hair, I just want to keep the amount of hair i have now and hope that I wont lose anymore.

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Propecia will slow the process down and sometimes provide some regrowth, but it won’t cure the loss completely. You will continue to lose hair at some rate, over time. I do not believe increased hair loss is common when you start Propecia use, but I have heard others mention it.

I would expect that a 16 year old will get a better response than a 21 year old with very early loss. We rarely see boys of your age go on the drug or have enough hair loss to warrant taking the drug, so I don’t have a wealth of past experience with teens on Propecia. Please follow up with your doctor.

Exclamation Mark Hairs – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I know that you’ve addressed this before in a post a few years ago, where you suggested that exclamation mark hairs were a sign of a more serious infection. However, I was wondering if you could provide a little more information as to if it is also a sign of Is it a sign of traditional male pattern baldness?

Particularly if the thinning is very gradual down the hair shaft, only detectable if you bend the fallen hair so as to compare the top of the hair with the bottom next to the bulb.

If they get thinner towards the bulb and less heavily pigmented is this an example of the process of miniaturization? If not, rather than an underlying infection, could it be due to a lack of vitamins, or telogen effluvium?

If this smaller diameter is noticeable on all the hairs that are being lost, even from the side and back of the head, or even body hair is that the case where it is more likely to be as you originally suggested an underlying infection?

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Hairs that look like exclamation marks can be a sign of a variety of issues, but alopecia areata is chiefly among them and often points to this diagnosis. Other possibilities include lupus, thyroid disorders, and some allergies. I don’t mean to get you alarmed, so see a doctor for an examination to get to the bottom of the problem.

I’ve written about this before — Is Hair Normally Thinner Towards the Root?.

In the News – Evolution of Hairless Humans – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Snippet from the article:

Stand up straight! And do something about that hair!” Annoying? Sure. But such parental advice may have made humans what we are today. Because our upright stance, and relative lack of hair, may have enabled our human ancestors to run far and fast enough to capture their prey. So say scientists in the Journal of Human Evolution.

The idea that standing on two legs and shedding all that body hair might have helped early humans keep cool on the African savanna was first trotted out in the late 1980s. But those early models had our ancestors standing still in a gentle breeze. Scientists simply didn’t have the computational power to assess what might happen when those early humans had to up and chase down a meal.

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Read the rest — Upright and Hairless Make Better Long-Distance Hunters

The above article is actually a transcript of a podcast. The published model can be found here.

Actor Kelsey Grammer’s Hair – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Dr. Rassman.
I wanted to ask your opinion of Kelsey Grammer’s hair – maybe it’s my imagination but he seems to have more hair lately than he used to. Do you think he may have had a transplant? If so, how many grafts would you estimate?

Recent photo and Older photo

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Kelsey Grammer

The comparison photos do look like Kelsey Grammer (known for his work in sitcoms Frasier and Cheers) has more hair in recent years, but I cannot determine if he had a hair transplant.

But assuming that he did, if I had to make a guess of how many grafts he may have received to attain the look in the photo… I’d say more than a 1000 but less than 3000. Yeah, sort of a wild guess. The photos I’ve found make it difficult to really see his hair perfectly without image compression or different lighting conditions.

Temporary SMP? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello, I read your blog everyday and wanted to thank you for the information you provide. I am a 40 year old male and been on propecia and minoxidil for over 15 years with pretty good results. I find now my crown is getting pretty thin and wondering if SMP would be an option for covering up the crown for my hair which is a light brown/sandy blond .Is there such a thing as temporary SMP that might only last a few years?

Thanks

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Scalp MicroPigmentation (SMP) should be considered permanent. If you want a temporary solution, I would suggest you research topical camouflage products such as DermMatch or Toppik.

Finasteride and Cognition? – Balding Blog

I am a medical intern working 80+ hour week. My hair loss is probably due to a combination of stress and Androgenetic alopecia. Would taking finasteride impair my cognition? Are there any studies that test congition and finasteride use? Should I take HairDX Genetic Test before starting on finasteride?

Thanks

If you are medical intern you should know to look up these types of questions on PubMed. I have yet to come across any studies or valid reports that taking finasteride will impair cognition. There is a study that suggests finasteride can inhibit hippocampal neurogenesis in mice, but there’s another study that say sleep deprivation can cause the same thing. Plus, we don’t know how this translates to humans.

I’ve heard cognition mentioned by patients who find abstract information on the Internet, but I really do not know what to make of it. I don’t recall having patients tell me about any personal experiences with memory or concentration issues after starting finasteride, though.

With respect to the HairDX genetic test, I do not have a strong opinion. Genetic balding is diagnosed by a physical exam and the treatment is based on an individual case by case basis. The best test for the presence of hair loss is mapping the scalp for miniaturization and measuring hair bulk.




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How Often Are Mice Studies Actually Successful? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I see that mice are often used in studies for medicine before they are tested on humans such as this article posted recently on this site in regards to balding (here). I am not sure if anyone would have this information readily available, but how often is medicine that is successful in mice also successful in humans? I am curious to a percentage of a success/fail rate.

Thank you for your very informative site!

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Animals such as mice, dogs, monkeys, etc are often used in medicine. In general, it may take many years for the study to leap from animal trials to human trials. With respect to the success and failure rates of such studies ever making to human trials, I would wildly guess that there are way more failures than successes… but I don’t have precise figures to satisfy your curiosity.