Using Body Hair for Eyebrow Restoration – Balding Blog

(male) I have a question regarding eyebrow restoration. All of the websites I’ve been to for doctors who specialize in eyebrow restoration describe the procedure in the same way. They all talk about using donor hair from the scalp. Is there any alternative way of obtaining donor hair, i.e., from a different location on the body, so as to eliminate the issue of transplanting hair that may or may not have the same characteristics as eyebrow hair, and hair that will continue to grow unless trimmed periodically for the rest of a person’s life? What about using arm hair, leg hair, or chest hair? Also, is it possible to obtain donor hair by extracting, rather, plucking, existing eyebrow hair? Can the follicles be extracted that way?

Body hair has a long sleep cycle. For every body hair that you transplant, less than 4 out of 10 will grow at any one time because of this long cycle. Hair from different parts of the body have different sleep cycles. I’ve answered this before a few times, most recently here.

Your thinking is good, but the cycling of the hair makes this approach not practical. I would be reluctant to moving eyebrow hair around. There is a possibility that if it is move, it may not regrow, so I avoid this solution. All hair can be extracted using the FUE techniques that I have pioneered (see Follicular Unit Extraction: Minimally Invasive Surgery for Hair Transplantation).




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Scalp Biopsy as Child Resulted in 2 Bald Spots on Side of Head – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

HI, I hope you can help me..im a 22 year old male and i have two bald spots on the sides of my head, one 4 times larger than the other. From what i can gather this is a result from a biopsy i had done when i was a baby due to pimples on the head. My mother took me to the doctor because they would swell up due to the chlorine in the pool. The doctor told my mother the hair would grow back and boy was he lying..to this day i have to wear black eyeshadow and keep my hair longer to keep it hidden..please tell me you know an answer to this..
thanks in advance!

Small scars on the scalp can generally be treated with a hair transplant with good results. It is dependant on the location of the scar, the size, your hair color & characteristics (wavy, curly, and straight). FUE is an easy way to treat small scars.

Taking Grafts From Side of Head for Small Scar Repair? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi, I was wondering, since my procedure only requires 50 grafts [scalp scar repair], do you think it would be okay for my doctor to make the incision to the side instead of in the middle of my scalp? Because I don’t want any scar to show when I have pig-tales or something. I forgot to ask this at my consoltation, although I doubt you would really be able to see it even if the incision was in the middle of my scalp, because the incision would be so small, and my doctor is using a trichophytic closure, so I doubt it would show anyways, but I just want to be on the safe side. Is the outcome any different if the incision is in the middle of the scalp or to the side?

Most people with a small number of grafts get an FUE harvest so that there will be no easily visible scar, no matter where the grafts come from. Alternatively, you could take the harvest with a strip from the sides, so that it could be parted in the middle without showing a scar. The FUE approach may be better. If you had your consultation here at NHI, please feel free to call 800-NEW-HAIR to schedule another consultation.

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FUE vs Hair Multiplication – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Sorry to bother you about my small scar again, but I have been doing a lot of research about Follicular Multiplication, and I have read that it is a lot like FUE, except they do not extract the whole follicle.(So the extracted hair will grow back). I was just wondering if that might be an option for me, becuase I have a very small scar on my scalp, and I would really like to fill it in with a small hair transplant, but I am afraid that the transplant will cause more damage to my hair than the scar is to begin with.

I don’t know what to do, because it is so small, but it bothers me, and I would really just like to get it repaired, but I don’t want to cause any damage to the rest of my hair.

An FUE procedure will not damage your scalp or hair. Hair multiplication is experimental and probably will not work. There are a number of companies like Aderans and Intercytex trying to induce formation of new follicles. Most researchers would accept anything, whether it be follicular neogenesis or rejuvenation or stem cell yields, or anything that will make a new hair, any way it comes. Unfortunately, this technology is probably years away, still.

Why not just fix this small scar if it is so bothering and get it behind you?

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Doctor Said FUE Would Leave Detectable Scars – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi, I am sixteen-years-old, and I just recently went to a consoltation with my parents to address the scalp scar, (non-transplant)that I had wrote about in a previous post. The doctor has been doing hair restoration for over 30 years and he seems to know what he is talking about. Well, my question is this, I went into the office thinking that he would recommed the FUE procedure to fill in this scar, but instead he told me he would be using FUT. He said that he would use a trichophytic closure and that the small scar he would make would be virtually undetectable. I asked him why he wouldn’t use FUE, and he told me that he performs this procedure, but he said that it would cost me twice as much and it would leave me with little scars that would be even more detectible than the trichophytic-closed scar. He said that my scar would require 50 unit grafts, and that this would be no problem. I just wanted to know your opinion. Does this doctor sound correct?

-P.S. My parents and I would really like to know, because we want to get the best treatment possible, and we need some advice. Thank-you

Either FUE or FUT will do the job. This doctor may not be comfortable with FUE, but it is not a procedure that produces any socially-detectable scars. In other words, FUE will not produce a noticeable scar (less than 1 mm punctate scars), versus a small, barely noticeable linear scar with FUT. The choice is yours. Although the FUE is often more expensive, I doubt that 50 follicular units would be an appreciable difference in costs.

As you are local to my Los Angeles office, if you and your parents are looking at options and would like a free consultation with an NHI physician, you can call 800-NEW-HAIR to schedule an appointment or visit the NHI site to request more info.

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Hair Loss InformationCutting One Follicle to Make Two – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

When a hair is extracted with FUE, why doesn’t it grow back? I mean, couldn’t you just extract the greater part of the follicle, and leave a small portion still in the dermis, and it could generate two hair, like follicular multiplication?

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When performing the FUE procedure, you may potentially transect the follicle, thereby damaging it and causing the hair to not grow. The other possibility is that if the follicle is left behind without damage, then it might regrow. What you are postulating has been a study that was done by many people and published in medical journals (an interesting article that addresses this is: “Cloned” Hairlines: The Use of Bisected Hair Follicles to Create Finer Hairlines).

Basically, one hair will not make more than one hair. When a hair is cut in two, one part dies and the other part may grow, but if it does it is often thinner than it was before the damage was done.

Hair Loss InformationI Want to End This 15 Year Nightmare – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

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.

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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.

Shaving Donor Area for FUE – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi, I am scheduled for a minor FUE procedure to fill in a scar on my scalp, (non-transplant). My hair is very long, and I found out that the back of my head would have to be shaved. My question is, how much of the back of my head will be shaven if the procedure only requires 100 grafts? Would I be able to hide this shaven area will the rest of my hair while it’s still short like that? And also, about how long would my hair take to grow to a normal lenghth again? How many inches does hair grow in a year? And for my final question, to bypass this whole shaving back of head thing, would it be possible to retrieve these hair from another part of my body since there is such a little amount to be extracted?
Thank-you so much

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These questions should have been addressed between you and your doctor. If not, you should call him or her and ask these questions. I think that the actual answer can be seen by looking at the creative way we extracted grafts with FUE. Generally, for a 100 graft FUE procedure, your hair would not require extensive shaving and what shaving was done should not be detectable (the photos below show how well the FUE shaved sites are covered when the hair is left long).

Normally your hair grows at 1/2 inch a month (so 6 inches a year) on average.

There are doctors who do body hair transplants on the scalp. However, these are not proven or widely accepted techniques. More importantly, body hair has a short growth phase and long sleep phase which makes it a poor transplant source.

Hair Loss InformationFUE and Hair Cloning – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’ve been reading many of the blogs on your website, and they have come in quite handy, but one question I have, I could not find. I asked this question before on your website, but I didn’t get a response. I wanted to know if you extract a hair follicle with FUE, and then if something better came around such as hair cloning or something like that, then could I then replace the extracted hair. (e.g- If you extracted a hair, does it have the capability to grow another hair if a hair is then implanted back to that same spot? -Would really like to know. Thanks

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If you had a FUE procedure, where an individual hair follicle is taken from the back of your scalp one at a time and reimplanted to a balding part of your scalp, you would be left with a small punctate scar which would be virtually undetectable. It would be impractical to reimplant a hair follicle back to the FUE site, because the scars are too small. To the human eye, the FUE site would not even look thinner, because it takes over 50-60% of hair loss to detect any thinning.

To put it straight, if you could get a hair follicle or a follicular unit, or a cloned hair for that matter into an FUE scar, it would almost certainly grow.

Shaving Head After FUE Procedure – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

How long after FUE is it safe to shave the head short? Is there danger of pulling out grafts.
Many thanks for your time.

I clip the patient’s hair short on the day an FUE is performed and you can keep it that way. Shaving the head can be safe at about 1 week. Be careful not to cut the new skin in the donor area, though.

These photos are from 11 days after one FUE procedure of 1,901 grafts. Click the photos to enlarge.

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