Hair Loss InformationTransplanting Hair Before the Loss is Noticeable – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Dr. Rassman:

Thank you for your outstanding blog. I have a question about hair transplants. Most of the before/after pictures that I’ve seen show patients with substantial balding who then receive very noticeable new coverage. I wonder, though, whether it is possible to design and begin to execute a H.T. Master Plan beginning in the very early stages of hair loss, so that — rather than suffering noticeable loss and then receiving visible new coverage in that area — the transplants can instead be inserted into areas that are just beginning to thin but still have substantial coverage.

It seems that people who work in the public eye — television anchors, actors, and so forth — must have a way to plan out their transplants so as to seem simply to retain their hair, rather than seeming to lose it and gain it back. Does transplanting into areas that still have coverage make the eventual loss of the remaining hair in that area transpire more quickly? Can transplants be performed BEHIND a fairly solid hairline if the surgeon determines that declining hair counts make it inevitable that this area will eventually go bald?

I’m a 29-year-old male, and I began using 1.25 mg/day of finasteride eight years ago. I still have quite decent coverage — noticeably thin in the vertex when under bright lights, somewhat recessed temples with miniaturized/vellus hairs at the temple hair line, and a decreasing hair count that is only noticeable to me in the first two inches of the frontal hairline. After noticing fairly quick loss in college, the erosion has been very slow during my eight years of finasteride treatment. However, I am aware of the five-year finasteride studies showing hair counts dropping after two years of treatment and continuing down from there.

I understand the need for conservative transplant treatment at my relatively young age, in order to preserve appropriate reserves of potential donor hair. (This is why I know it would be inadvisable to move my hairline FORWARD toward its adolescent location.) However, I am hoping that I can replace hair BEFORE I entirely lose it — including bolstering the hairline and several inches behind it before the inevitable loss there becomes noticeable. So, I wonder if you could tell me: do HT surgeons ever transplant into an area that still has substantial coverage, so that the loss doesn’t need to become noticeable before it is replaced? In other words, can a Master Plan be devised to prepare for inevitable future loss before that loss actually fully occurs, rather than waiting for visible baldness before surgery takes place? (I wonder how else, say, actors and television anchors are able to avoid the appearance of “losing and regaining.”)

Thanks very much for your time! I appreciate it.

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I have firmly established a viewpoint to not transplant people before they are ready. Preventing visible hair loss with transplants is performed by some doctors and those happen to represent the doctors who are more in this for money rather than the welfare of their patients.

As good as you think you might be able to predict what will happen to you, you might be surprised to see that the balding will actually occur differently than you expected. As the supply is limited on everyone who will become significantly bald, you could run out and not complete what you will need if you are too aggressive. I am often humbled by the balding process, but I am also the biggest fan of being conservative.

After Falling Out, Teen Girl’s Hair Regrew As a Different Color and Texture – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

(female)
I’m 17 years old. When I was 15 I noticed that my hair starting falling out very often. During that time I was planning my Sweet 15 I wasn’t sure if that was the reason why my hair started falling, because of some of the stress. Last year my hair started falling every day, almost a hand full. I started getting worried because cancer runs in my family on both sides and I always wondered if I had a sickness but I doubt it now because I dont have any signs of that. I’ve noticed though that some of my hair is growing back but differently. It seems to grow thicker or more brittle than the regular hair I have. My hair is dark brown but the new hairs are black. I have two older sisters, one has lost an amount of hair but thats becuase of all the gel, hairspay, and the hot tools. The other still has a lot of hair and she is 28. So i’m wondering if you know why my hair started falling out at age 15? and why are some hairs growing back thicker and somewhat curly or brittle when I have straight hair (i hardly use any hot tools).

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I could write a book on what is possible in your situation. Unfortunately, I don’t know the things that you are doing to your hair and wonder if you are using chemicals that are causing problems. If this is only stress related, then telogen effluvium could be the cause. Figuring out female hair loss is complex and you need professional advice from a good dermatologist. I certainly would not put cancer on the top of that list of potential causes.

For more possible causes of women’s hair loss, see: WebMD.

Would You Transplant a 22 Year Old with a Norwood Class 2? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’m considering a hair transplant due to my receding hair. I’d like to think I’m a class II hair loss patient with an extreme widows peak, not Jack Nicholson yet, but give it two years. The thing is I’m 22 years old. What would you say is the average age of transplant patient? Is their a preferred age? Would 22 be to young? I’d like to get a transplant before everyone knows me as bald. Bad decision?

Fan of you’re work, thank you for you’re time.

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No, I would most likely not transplant a 22 year old Norwood Class 2 patient. Hair transplants are much too early for a Norwood 2 patient and at such a young age you may precipitate more hair loss. You are probably not balding, but maturing your hairline. I’ve transplanted men your age, but their hair loss pattern was much more advanced.

Age That Hair Stops Growing – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

At what age does your hair stop growing? I am 52 and people say i look 38……..and i would love my hair to grow but it never seems to pass the middle of my back. Just curious. Does Biotin help? I take that often.

As we age, our anagen cycle (the growth cycle of the hair) shortens. Hair grows out at about 1/2 inch per month, but the number of months of growth before it cycles is what I am talking about. If your hair cycle was 6 years, then you could expect a hair length of 3 feet; 3 years would be 18 inches (or shoulder length), 2 years is 12 inches, 1 year is 6 inches, and so on.

Men generally have shorter hair cycles than women (it is rare for a man to be able to grow 3 feet long hair). As we get into our senior years, the hair cycle may only last months, so the hair is shorter. The hair stops growing in balding or thinning areas, or at death.

Will Skipping Some Minoxidil Applications Still Be Effective? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I am a 22 year old male and use 5% minoxidil either once or twice a day. My new schedule makes it hard for me to use minoxidil everyday and am wondering if using it every other day will
still be effective.

Every other day is not the recommended dose and you probably will not get much, if any benefit from it. Twice a day is the only way to use it. At the age of 22, if this is male pattern baldness (MPB), then Propecia (finasteride 1mg) is the preferred way to go, not minoxidil. I’ve seen much better results in the younger men taking Propecia than those using minoxidil.

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Age-Related Thinning – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi Doc,

I’ve been working at the same office for 17 years. Many of the same guys I started with are still there. As I looked at pictures of the group over the years I noticed every guy has less hair. Not bald, but you can see a decreasing hairline or slight thinning in the crown over time. Do drugs such as Rogaine and propecia prevent or regrow age related thinning which appears to happen to most men over time?

About half of the male population will have genetic hair loss so what you may be observing is just that. Not everyone with genetic balding gets very bald.

I’m unclear about what you mean by “age related thinning”. If you’re talking about the natural maturing of the hairline or the thinning that occurs as men age, then no, it is not likely that medication will regrow this hair. If you happen to work at a place where the men all coincidentally have some degree of genetic male pattern hair loss, then yes, those medications will likely help in some degree.

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What Are the Chances That My Hair Loss Has Stabilized at Age 35? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Dr. I love this site, been reading like crazy. Thank-You. I first realized that I was developing some balding at the right front side area when I was 29. I didn’t pay much more attention until about 32/ 33 because my hair covered up okay and frankly I had never heard of propecia as an option. As I type this I’m now 34 and have been on propecia for just 10 weeks (no side effects) as my hairloss is more noticeable in the front. My hair is full in the sides / top and back with virtually no balding at the vertex but if you look at me from the front I have the shape of hairloss in and upside down U with the centre still intact at the original hairline . I’m taking the propecia as a defense measure against any further balding and because I NEED to keep this middle centre portion to have any chance of styling at all. My question is …. At nearly 35 is there a good chance I have stabilized ? I am committed to propecia for life because a pill a day is no big deal….is there a chance I could turn those “thinned” out hairs into better coverage hairs in the ” upside down u”. Thanks.

P.s the generosity of your time here is very appreciated.

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Genetic hair loss is progressive, and although it does generally slow down, that may not apply to you. From your history, you did not really lose enough of your hair to notice it until you were in your early 30s. That means that you were a late starter and that your hair loss will be progressive later in life than the general rule in the majority of young men.

Get your hair mapped out for miniaturization ASAP so that you can compare the impact of finasteride 1 year after you started taking it. Between the two measurements and the degree of miniaturization that is there now, you and your doctor may be able to predict what will happen to you in the future.

I Started Losing Hair Before I Hit Puberty! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

dear doctor,

PLEASE HELP ME!
i am a 16 year old male teen. the hair on the top of my head has been thinning since age 9-10, and i fear that at the rate i will not have hair on the top of my head by this time next year. this has been 6 long years that have been devastating to my self-confidence and i dont know if i can deal with being bald at age 16.

i did plenty of research on my dilemma, and i didnt find any record of a case that is similar to mine. i have been to a doctor, and have been tested for things such as thyroid, but it always come out negative. my doctors dont really seem to care much to help me. they tell me its just hereditary, but i dont understand how it could be. i started losing my hair before i hit puberty, and also my my whole family still has there hair. even my grandma and grandpa who are in his 70’s have nearly all there hair.

at age 12 i was told to start using rogaine, but stopped because i know that there is something else wrong that is not being found. every day i wake up and look in the mirror to see that i have lost more hair. it getting harder and harder to hide it from my friends. and everywhere i go im constantly reminded of it because my hair shows up everywhere like in my sink, or on my desk at school.

anyway, please please please answer me back. you’ll be the one person in the world that cares enough to truly help me find out the problem and hopefully the answer. thank you for listening.

I wish I could offer you some solid advice or anything of substance, but you really need to be examined, as your case is quite unusual. I couldn’t do you any justice by just guessing at your problem via the web. As you indicated in your email that you’re located in New Jersey, try to arrange a visit with Dr. Robert Bernstein (with offices in Fort Lee, NJ and Manhattan, NY). He can examine you and offer suggestions.

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I Am Bald at 78 Years Old — Is There a Solution for Me? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I am a male and started to loose my hair when I was 18 yrs old and now I am 78 yrs old and have male pattern horseshoe shape baldness. I hate being bald. is there any solution for me? thank you

It’s never too late! I have performed hair transplants for men in their 70’s and 80’s. Here are two patients off the top of my head that have had surgery in their 70s:

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Does the Hairline Mature Throughout Your Entire Life? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi doc,

I am 26 years old and my whole life (Thanks to God) I’ve had a full head of thick hair, like Patrick Dempsey. Even now, my hair is very thick and full. I’ve noticed that my hairline has receded in the corners about 1 inch / 1 1/2 and my hair line in the front is still pretty similar to the one I had when I was a teenager. So my questions is that is the receding in corners normal . .. how much longer will it recede? I’ve noticed that in pictures that are 2 years older the angles are less receding than they are now . . . does the hairline continue to mature throughout your entire life? thanks!

The maturing hairline usually completes the process by the time you reach 30 years old, but there are always exceptions to this. There are some primates that develop a mature hairline or even balding when they pass puberty so we are really not that unique. Hair on your head will absolutely change as you get older, as most people find that the hair grows slower and finer to a different end length. The older you get, the more of these changes that you might see (not everyone, but most people notice it). That gorilla hair type that you may have had when you were 8 years old, will become a distant memory when you get to be 50.

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