I Want My Head to Always Have a 5 O’Clock Shadow of Hair

Heres one for you: I wouldnt mind a shaved head if the shadow of existing thick hair wasnt so obvious around the donor areas. It’s like the top is your normal face color, and the donor areas white with potential hair. The shadow where hair grows is just so noticeable. My question is: is there a procedure where you can have implanted just tiny hairs as in a shadow over your balding? So it looks like you only shave your head?

I suppose you can tattoo your bald area, but that’s not the recommended route. I have seen it done in a few patients with reasonable results, but they have done this because of some deforming surgery they had from older hair transplant techniques many years earlier. Alternatively, you can air spray the balding area to develop a subtle shadow. If you’re looking to transplant a “5 o’clock shadow” look to your head (like the facial hair style that became popular in the 1980s), it’s really not going to be possible without having visible scarring to some degree (even if minor from FUE) in the donor area.

In other words, to answer your question — no.


2008-02-20 11:19:29I Want My Head to Always Have a 5 O’Clock Shadow of Hair

I Want Scar Revision and Then FUE to Eliminate My Scar Completely

Hi,

First of all I want to thank you for this informative blog. I have searched this wonderful blog and have found numerous postings relating scars and hair transplant. Here’s my case: I have what “they” call a coronal scar that runs from ear to ear. What I want is to completely cover the scar through a FUE procedure, but I want my scalp to be like how it first was, normal. My research has been conclusive and I first want to have a scar revision surgery to reduce the width of the scar, once that is done i want to follow some type of scar treatment to make the scar less obvious in color (seems like the scar gets pink/red after a scar revision surgery). Afterward get the FUE procedure and go from there. Is there any treatments that you would suggest?

I want the scar to be inconspicuous to the point to be able to cut the hair in the military/short hair style, because ultimatley i want to join the military as an officer.

Best Regards

Your plan is good, but it may not be realistic to have the scar completely hidden. Even if the hair in the scar is brought up to near normal density (which may take a few FUE procedures), there is often a color difference in the remaining scar, though of course it will be hidden with FUE grafts.

As you are local to my Los Angeles office, please arrange to see me so that I can ascertain a plan that matches yours. Any preparatory treatments can be assessed and recommended when you see me. You can call 800-NEW-HAIR (or 310-553-9113) to schedule a free consultation with myself or Dr Pak.

I Want Specific Solutions to My Mustache Problem!

I’m looking for an explanation on why all of a sudden I have a bold spot in the right side of my mustache. I read about other persons having the same problem in your site and asking the same questions, but at that time, no specific answer was provided besides going to an specialist and sending you a photo. Any changes lately?

Just because I am a doctor, it does not mean I have all the answers. The sudden appearance of a bald spot could reflect a series of medical conditions such as ringworm, alopecia areata, and/or other autoimmune diseases. You need to see a good dermatologist if you want to know more.

I want to do a hair transplant but I don’t want it to be seen by others

Considering getting a H.T to fill in the front corners of my hairline better. This isn’t a question of if I should get it I just want some info on the healing side of things.

Say I get a H.T in late December, I’ll have enough vacation time to go away until February and not see anyone from my real life during that time. Once I am back in February, will I be able to wear a hat freely? Will the transplant be obvious if I am not wearing a hat or will it just look like it did before the transplant?

Right now very few would see me as losing hair but I’ve lost enough in the corners to make it difficult to style it the way I like and would like to have a true nw1 I am just concerned with others noticing I had something done. Thanks

Keep your hair long so that the recipient area can be covered with the hair you have. Make sure that the doctor teaches you to wash your hair so that you are not crusty like this: https://baldingblog.com/terrible-crusting-one-week-fue-photo/ bur rather like this: https://baldingblog.com/one-day-post-op-with-photo/ because you should be able to go out in public within a day or two.


2021-02-13 12:15:14I want to do a hair transplant but I don’t want it to be seen by others

I want to do SMP on my own head

Sounds like a bad idea obviously but consider that someone has

  • long hair

  • black hair

  • dense hair but in the beginnings of diffuse

  • taken fin and is maintaining on fin

There is no drawing, just black hair

It is a difficult process because the depth control is critical to be not much more than 1/2mm. If you don’t get it right, it turns into a painted head. To do an entire head, it often takes us 20 hours of detailed work with two people working on your head. Do you really think that you can do this yourself? Look at our website: https://scalpmicropigmentation.com/


2020-11-04 09:58:24I want to do SMP on my own head

I Want to End This 15 Year Nightmare

Hello Dr. Rassman. I received my first hair transplant when I was 22. I received several procedures which gave me a horse shoe shape of plugs in my hair line. At that time my social life shut down completely and I wore a hat until 1996. At the time I located a new doctor and he doctor recommended removing only the plugs at the outer edge of the hairline and focusing on hiding the plugs with follicular grafts after three procedures I was able to take my hat off again although the plugs were somewhat hidden the hair line was very hard like a wall. I was never able to accept how unnatural it felt and behaved when groomed. The density behind the hair line would never match the horse shoe in my hair line. I have had two procedures to thin out the plugs and with each procedure it looks and feels better, but the camouflage came with a tradeoff. I now have a large donor scar ear to ear 5/8 wide I had two procedures to remove the scar. It did not work and the scar soon returned. I am currently having FUE extraction procedures to camouflage the scar and thin out the hair line. I believe this combination of procedures can get me the result I am looking for. I refuse to have any more linear procedures due to my healing qualities and the fact I find them way to invasive. Enter new problem — it has been harder to talk to my doctor. I believe he is tired of me and I have trouble communicating with him since I believe it will take three more procedures to get a natural result. Enter problem two — my last procedure was extremely painful. Each injection of local anesthesia was unbearable and very traumatic. I believe I am so close to having a hair line that looks and feels natural and a scar that is difficult to detect so I can finally go out and have a social life again before I reach forty. My goal is to end this 15 year nightmare before I reach 37. I just turned 35. I am still single.

The old plugs can be a real nightmare and I really feel for your pain. It sounds like your current doctor has kept up with the correct treatments and has brought you a long way. Life is full of trade-offs and it appears that the downside of your present nightmare is the pain associated with each anesthesia and the scar from the strip surgeries, so I will address these first.

Anesthesia: There are ways to handle the pain associated with the anesthesia. For the audience who is reading this, I will explain that when a great deal of scar is present, the anesthesia gets to be very difficult and the more scar, the more difficult will be the anesthesia. But with that said, there are ways to reduce the pain you are having by using such systemic medications as Versed and Ketamine in combination, which will wipe out any pain that you might experience with further surgeries. If you doctor is not comfortable with this approach, you might have him/her bring in an anesthesiologist to monitor you through the initial injections to set up the anesthesia. I have offered this option to a few of my patients.

Scars: Scars come with all types of surgery (100% of the time) and when you have many surgeries, there is a scar of sort associated with each, even if they are in the exact same place. I tend to separate the scar issues of the donor area (which can be covered with long hair) with the other important priorities, your appearance to the public who can often not see what lies below. The goal is, of course, a normal looking hairline and a decent head of hair without obvious plugging or abnormalities. Then when the normalcy is reached from a social point of view, I tackle the scars as my primary and last set of activities using FUE if it is needed to finalize the best end point that is socially undetectable. There are many good tools that are available to treat the scars that were created by the varying older techniques and FUE is one of the newer ones. For some people with very extensive scars, balloon expanders are a reasonable option, but these often require wearing a hat to hide the balloon expanders for the 10-14 weeks it takes to stretch the normal hairy scalp so that the scars can be removed. The good things about balloon expanders is that they often will yield a good deal of additional transplants which can nicely refine the last of the corrective work.

“Socially undetectable” means that the work is repaired so that in normal situations any person will look reasonably normal. This may require a styling adjunct with the the reconstructive work. Apparently, this is what your doctor has successfully addressed and from the little you wrote here, you did admit that “I believe I am so close to having a hair line that looks and feels natural and a scar that is difficult to detect so I can finally go out and have a social life again before I reach forty.”

Repairs: This is a nightmare which I have shared with too many patients over the years. From the articles we wrote, we have developed a sizable repair practice as doctors and patients from around the world have found us as a resource. We are a team made up of good caring doctors and focused patients who we educate on the realities of their situations. The rewards, from my point of view, have been very worthwhile. Sometimes you have to look back and see from ‘whence you came’. A good doctor goes through much anguish because he/she wants the process to end as fast and as soon as the patient does, but the doctor must be realistic and keep an objective hat on his head at all times, even when the patient gets antsy and frustrated. Those times are the tests that doctors and patients have to struggle through. I suggest that patients like you should try to understand that progress is slow at times. The tortoise beat the hare in the race, because the tortoise was steady, making consistent progress towards the goal. Some of the horribly deformed patients I have seen over the years have become normal people, leaving their freaky look as a nightmare past. With the techniques which we have developed today, almost every patient can be helped, provided that they have suitable donor hair to relocate.

Reality: When I say almost every patient can be helped, what I really mean is that I will give an honest opinion as to what can be done and if the patient will hear what I’ve said, I can usually come close to the target that I outlined in the initial consultation. I always put my opinions into an extensively written report outlining the goals that I think are reasonable and which are not. Most of the patients with the old style plugs suffer greatly because of the deformities created by these old techniques. Many feel that they have been abused, taken advantage of, and become victims. They often have lost trust in all doctors. Anger is part of the problem that stands in the way of getting the best out of a good doctor/patient relationship. The key for the doctor embarking on such a project is to try to establish trust and confidence, a sense of teamwork, and a genuine feeling of caring. I have helped people who I could not bring back to a normal looking full head of hair, but I have made a point to communicate with them (in advance) the reality of what we can accomplish. The greatest problem I have seen is that some patients have run out of donor hair, so that even using the old plugs as a source of donor hair by harvesting with FUE techniques, there may still not be enough hair to get it all fixed.

See Dean’s Story for a complete repair process from plugs to a normal looking head of hair.

I Want to Get Rid of My Hair Plugs!

I had an old fashion hair transplant using the large plug method. Now, I would like to cut my hair short (or shave my head). The plugs on the top of my head are virtually undetectable. I can probably have a laser treatment to completely hide them. No hair really grew anyway. But here is the real question, how do I get rid of the .75 inch high by 4 inch long rows of plugs where the donor area exists? I have spoken to several surgeons and have been told things from FUE to simply cutting around the entire area and sewing it back together. I am no surgeon, but cutting the area out and sewing it back together just seems like a waste of good tissue and hair follicles. Why can’t a surgeon simply re-cut the existing holes and sew them back together leaving the surrounding skin and hair intact. This is similar to the way he/she would do it if removing plugs on the top area of someone’s head? Any thoughts or comments would be greatly appreciated.

There is an art to managing this problem and we published the various methods of repair in distinguished medical journals in the 1990s. One way, when the hairline is too low, is to remove the frontal hairline surgically — and then re-transplant it with modern techniques. This approach leaves minimal scarring and what scar may be developed is completely covered by the hair transplant. Another approach is to remove the big plugs one at a time. Using FUE, we can often just thin the plugs.

As you indicated you’re in the Los Angeles area, you should come in for a free consultation and then allow us to make a recommendation. Also, see past posts about Repair, many of which are about fixing old plugs.

I Want to Grow Chest Hair!

I am 22 yrs. and I have very little hair around my nipples but no hair on my chest. Is there any way I can grow chest hair?

No. There is no practical way to grow chest hair. I guess you could try minoxidil, which is known to grow hair, but it might get you a big dose of the medication if you apply it all over your chest. At your age, I would advise you to wait it out. If you have any Native American lineage, you may not grow chest hair at all. And some men just don’t have much chest hair.

I’m Worried About My DHT Levels with heavy exercise

I wana go back to the gym. Im 3.5 month on fin with super awesome results. I talked with my friend about it he said when u start to lift ur body produce more Test. More Test mean more dht even on fin. So how do i go back to gym?

Don’t worry about DHT when you lift weights. Just work out. The finasteride will hopefully take care of your hair loss and your work-out will not raise your DHT levels, causing more hair loss.


2020-01-06 08:19:34I’m Worried About My DHT Levels with heavy exercise

I want to get a hair transplant (from Reddit – photos)

You have moved from a juvenile hairline to a Mature hairline. Do you really want to transplant that now? Think twice. Hair transplant surgeons rarely restore the juvenile hairline; however, I did it once, on a ‘Soap Opera Day-time Star’ who had to have his juvenile hairline back to keep his job which earned him over $1 million/year. I don’t think that you will find a doctor willing to bring back that hairline you had shown in the right upper hand corner of the photos.


2020-12-09 15:28:21I want to get a hair transplant (from Reddit – photos)