Hair Loss InformationCan’t Take Finasteride, Follow-Up – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I want to reference: Can’t Take Finasteride, But Is a Hair Transplant Still an Option?

Dr Rassman,

Thank you for answering my original enquiry. Whilst i understand that one your goals is to protect patients from over enthusiasm for a HT. But is a HT something you would do on a 22yr old male who can’t take finestaride. I ask this before one fly’s across the globe to see you for a consultaion.

Thank You

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I can not tell you for certain that I would do a hair transplant on you without knowing your donor density and doing a miniaturization study to determine (if possible) what your projected hair loss is. Knowing your supply and demand potential and your density and laxity, I would then make a decision on a hair transplant on you. So if you can’t or won’t take Propecia (finasteride 1mg), it does not 100% rule you out, but I first need to make that assessment.

We can arrange a call after I receive good photos of you and base some of this evaluation at the time of a telephone consultation. To setup the telephone consultation with my office, you can fill out our handy web form and you’ll be contacted via email to complete the setup.

Transplanting Hair from Body to Face – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Would a body hair transplant work for just facial hair, like sideburns or even eyebrows

I would imagine that body hair transplantation (BHT) would work, but why not use scalp hair? I would match the hair and see what is best.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

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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.

Hair Loss InformationTransplanted Hairline Is Coming In Nicely, But the Crown is Growing Slow – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman, I had a hair transplant the first part of october 07 the front has filled out nicely but the top/crown is comming in at half the speed as the front, any ideas? I’m a 57 year old male. Also I would like a bit of your military service bio, I was wounded in 1969 and spent time at the 93 and 24 evac hospitals recouping.

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By 8 months, you should have growth in the crown. How much work did you get in the crown? Many times the crown just takes more grafts to get the fullness you need.

Regarding my military service — I was a surgeon at the 24th Evac Hospital in 1970 so you were there before I got there. I hope you did well in your recovery process.

Do I Need to Be on Propecia Before an FUE Procedure? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I have been losing hair for a long time now. I am 42 and want to start taking propecia. I am also considering FUE. I keep my hair really short (Setting 1 on clippers). My question is do I need to be on propecia before i get my fue procedure done. Will the doctor prescribe me propecia after my procedure. Can I avoid propecia if i get a FUE procedure.

You do not need to be on Propecia before any hair transplant surgery, but in most young men I recommend it and suggest that it is started as early before the surgery as reasonable (minimum 2 weeks). Generally though, it is always a good idea to minimize shock loss and also to minimize further natural hair loss with Propecia. The decision to go on a medication or even surgery is highly individualized to your particular situation, and you need to discuss all these pros and cons with your doctor.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

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What Are These Bumps on the Side of My Scalp 5 Months After Transplant? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

hi. i had a hair transplant 5 months ago, using the strip technique, only 1000 grafts due to receding at the temples and slight beginnings of an island forming, nothing too bad tho. i take proscar 1 mg per day. ive noticed lately that i keep on getting bumps and the odd pimple on my scalp. im not talking about the usual acne you get in the transplanted area as the new hairs are forcing their way through, thats been and gone. i mean bumps on my crown, at the side just above the ears, and at the back..whats going on!!!? its only maybe one or 2 a day, but i never had this before. could it be that the proscar is causing regrowth of new hairs in different parts of my hair…or is this just wishful thinking? could it be a bad thing and that follicles are dying?

any help would be greatly appreciated. thanks!

You should be asking these questions to the doctor who performed your surgery. Without examining you, I can only guess. In general, one can develop folliculitis after a few months from the surgery as the new hairs grow. Or there can be an infection (though rare) which can cause bumps. Or there can be foreign particles (also rare) that may be causing such reaction. Or you may have some other non hair transplant scalp issues. Get the point? I am not trying to brush you off on your issues, but it seems you have a specific concern that needs to be addressed with your doctor one on one.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

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I’m Histamine Positive – Can I Speed Up the Elimination of the Redness After Surgery? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman,

In the past, you have stated that post-op redness in the recipient area will linger longer in individuals that are histamine positive. I have very fair skin, and I am histamine positive based on the scratch test. Currently, I am 5 months out from surgery, which consisted of dense packing 3000 grafts in the front third of my scalp.

What do you recommend to speed up the process in order to eliminate the lingering pinkness that I am still experiencing? I have also put a call into my surgeon for his opinion, but would definitely like to have your opinion as well.

Thanks in advance!

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The use of limited amounts of hydrocortisone cream may help, but long term use is not healthy. I am hesitant to make specific recommendations to you as I have not seen you and therefore cannot make a judgment for you. My general approach is to point a direction on what to do, but hopefully you will get to your doctor for specific advice appropriate for your needs.

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.

Losing Hair from Previous Transplants to Shock Loss? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello,

I’m in my mid-40s. I’ve had 5 hair transplant procedures since 1996, the most recent 8 months ago. All of them were to fill in bald spots in the front hairline, mid section and the temples. After my last procedure I notice that I lost quite a lot of hair right around where the new grafts went in. Now I realize that sometimes surrounding hair follicles go into shock after a transplant. But a lot of the hairs I lost, not all, were transplanted hairs from previous transplants. That raises the question, how “permanent” are transplanted hairs? Would these grow back? It has been over 8 months already since the procedure.

The other question I have, I noticed in my last 2 procedures that not all of the grafts “took”, especially from the last one. I had received 300 grafts in the front hairline, and only about 75-100 actually grew hairs (yes I was counting them!) Is that acceptable? To me of course it s not. Could it be because the area has been worked on before?

Thank you very much for your informative site.

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I do not know what may be going on with you and your hair transplants. I would discuss these issues with your doctor who performed your surgery. Generally, hair transplants are permanent and if they came out (from a previous procedure) they should return. I have seen this about 6 times out of the thousands of hair transplants we have done at NHI, and each and every time a man has lost a previous transplant, it came back at about the same time as the newly transplanted hair. In rare instances, hair on the back of the scalp may not be permanent if you have conditions such as alopecia areata or just getting older, or if the hairs were harvested close to the neck line (the neck hairs may not be permanent).

Again, I would discuss your issues with your doctor who will be better equipped to know what is going on in your specific case.

Robotic Hair Transplant ETA? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I know you said you had a vested interest in robotic ht’s. I was wondering if there was any kind of eta on when it will be available to the gen pop? Also, how does one get involved in the testing? I’d be interested.

Thanks

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The company (Restoration Robotics) is currently conducting limited testing in the San Jose, CA area. I will update you more after the International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS) conference in September 2008, as I am sure they will have a presentation. Between now and then, I will contact them to see if I can get a real estimate on the release date, as well as a mechanism for volunteers to get into the action.