Hair Loss InformationMy Donor Scar is Visible When My Hair is Wet – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman,

I’m a 40 year old male. The scar (which almost encircles my entire donor area -sides and back) left from my transplant (which was done 2 years ago) becomes visible when my hair is wet or if I cut my hair at the length I’d like to wear. I read an earlier question regarding the visibility of scars. Will Mederma help – or is there some type of procedure which can alleviate this problem? There are no keloids, but, rather, no hair is growing on the scar, nor, it seems, around it.

Thanks

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What you tell us about the visible wounds is distinctly different than what we may judge when we examine you. There is a more see-through appearance when fine hair is wet, so I would not be surprised to see a very small scar. Assuming that the scar is not small, we would want to know the measurements of the wound (length and width), the size of the donor strip that was taken, and how many grafts you actually had done. Wounds have a pull which ‘want‘ to stretch and good wound healing gets around that pull as strong supportive tissues are laid down by your body to bond the wound together. Assuming that the techniques used were modern techniques by competent doctors, then we would want to know how tight your wound was at closure and what is the laxity (looseness) was at the time of surgery and now. Tight scalps may have a tendency to widen scars (by increasing the pull on the edges) when placed under tension.

Each of us is put together with different types of collagen. Those of us who have extra elastin put down by your body in the healing process have a tendency to stretch a wound more than those of us with less elastin. Simply excising the scar may or may not address the defect and my experience in some of these wounds is that they may return at the same level that they had reached prior to excising them. On some patients, scar revisions have been able to reduce wound width.

There are two factors you must consider for revising a scar:

  1. Your body’s inherent ability to heal and deal with scars, which no one has control over
  2. The surgical techniques used to minimize the scar

I can offer you the best surgical techniques available, however if your body does not heal what I do, you may not achieve the results you are looking for — so you do have a risk here. I have rarely, if ever, seen a scar worsen on an attempted repair. Repairs can be done with a scar revision and trichophytic closure or a transplant (could be an FUE) into the scar.

It is important to be aware that any cut on the skin will leave a scar in 100% of patients. If you are going to shave your scalp completely or cut your hair too short, there will almost always be a detectable scar even with the best case scenario.

To see an example of a great result from a trichophytic closure, check out the post from a couple of days ago — Result from Trichophytic Incision.

I Am Losing a Lot of Hair After My Transplant – The Doctor Didn’t Tell Me About This – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello Dr.

I recently(two weeks ago) had a hair transplant and am experiencing a lot of hairfall right now. My Dr. told me that i would lose the transplanted hair after the procedure, but i am also losing a lot of my own hair. Is it normal after the procedure? Would be greatful to you if you could please answer my question.

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It sounds like you are experience a phenomenon called “shock loss”. It occurs more in younger patients and patients with pre-existing miniaturized hairs. Thus, you often see me reiterate on here about the importance of a miniaturization study. It is a risk associated with a hair transplant procedure and it should have been outlined for you in your informed consent paper work before the surgery. You should have been put on Propecia prior to the surgery to minimize the risks, particularly if you are under the age of 35 or if you have had recent hair loss.

Search Results for “procede” – WRassman,M.D. BaldingBlog

I am not a chemist, and I really cannot comment on if those ingredients will grow hair. I’m not seeing anything proven to grow hair in there, though. I can tell you there is no cure for hair loss. Even the best medications we have (Propecia and Rogaine) still have limitations. As the ingredients you […]

FUE Procedure to Fill In Scar from FUT? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Doc: For those of us who prefer to wear our hair very short and are concerned about a visible scar left behind by FUT, is it possible to receive a FUT procedure followed by a FUE procedure to fill in the FUT scar? If so, how much time must pass before performing the FUE? Have there been positive results? Thanks.

Yes, that is one way to treat the widened donor scars and the results are usually good. You should allow at least 8-12 months so the donor scar can complete its maturation before any intervention. Some patients may need more than one session for this type of procedure and it has to do with the location of the scar and the quality of patient’s hair.

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Result from Trichophytic Incision (with Photo) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

In the photo below, you will see one of the best wounds I have seen after a strip surgery. In fact, I could not find it when I initially looked for it and only recognized it from some mild pinkish color that still remained in the scar area. Clearly, this is an atypically good healing situation with a good trichophytic closure where both technique and the patient’s healing characteristics work favorably for the patient. Photo taken just over 6 months after surgery.

Click the photo to enlarge.

 

Strip Procedure Out-Yields FUE Procedure Every Time? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello doc,

over at the hairlossadvances.com I read the following lines from one of the most serious posters over there:

“The actual surival and yield percentages of the strip compared to the FUE will vary from patient to patient based on pysiological characteristics but, strip will out-yield fue every time”.

If this is true, how much weaker is the FUE?

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It depends on what this poster means by “yield“.

If the question is strictly about the number of grafts (yield), then you’re correct — the strip procedure is far more efficient in the yield when compared to FUE. If you mean long term survival, then I would say that the answer is tied to the organization of the team of technicians and surgeon. If you mean the ability to come close to 100% hair by hair yield, I believe that strip harvesting yields 95%+ hair for hair yield, while FUE is often less than that. In other words, transection rates with strip harvesting are usually very low (under 5%), whereas FUE transection rates can run as high as 90% and as low as 5% (depending on the skill of the doctor and the collagen make-up of the patient).

Transplanting Hair to Chest? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I want to know if you have a method of transplant that will give me chest hair…I saw a program in NY while visiting that says there is a new way of doing this through transplant…

You can transplant head hair to the chest, but it will grow long, so it will have to be clipped. FUE or strip harvesting methods will work. We have done many pubic hair transplants in people who just did not have enough of it and it works very nicely.

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Dislodging a Graft After Hair Transplant – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Dr. Rassman:

Is this a good rule of thumb for any stage post op? “If there is no bleeding then you did not dislodge a graft”

Thanks

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The highest chance of graft dislodgement is within the first few days after surgery. As you go farther from the time of surgery, the chance of graft dislodgement decreases. When you pass day 5 you generally can not dislodge the graft with simple traction of the hair and even if you can pull the hair out, the graft stays in and is capable of making a new hair (see PDF file: Graft anchoring in hair transplantation. Dermatol Surg 2006; 32: 198-204 © 2006 R M Bernstein, MD, W R Rassman, MD). Dr. Bernstein and I published a paper that allowed us to pull out hair follicles from 1-10 days after surgery and then send off what was pulled out to find out if the growth centers of the grafts came out. What we found out was that after a few days they were generally secure, but that was when there was no crusting on the skin edge of the graft. If there was crusting, it would take up to about 10 days to risk losing a hair growth center when it is pulled out. But really now, who in his right mind other than Dr. Bernstein for experimental reasons, would want to pull hair out? Not any patient I know of.

Presence or absence of bleeding does not have to do with the survivability of a graft.

Hair Styling When You Do Not Have Enough Hair (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Everyone has seen those awful comb-overs and wonder how people get there. First, it is important to note these men did not wake up one morning, see that they were bald and then decide to grow out the hair above their ears to comb back to the other side. Politicians are frequently seen with these bizarre comb-overs. They develop insidiously over time. First a little hair loss, and the person starts combing their hair from one side to the other. The ‘part’ moves down over time as the hair by the ‘part’ grows longer and longer. For the first few years, this trick of styling with the patient’s own hair works well, even as the hair loss progresses, but sooner or later, the comb-over starts to become obvious as the balding area enlarges so much that the hair can not cover it. Because the change occurs each and every day over years, the person who uses the comb-over doesn’t notice it. Even their wives don’t see it, nor do many of those in a close family. If the comb-over is really bad (I see them at the theaters all of the time), friends and family don’t want to touch the subject, so these poor men just don’t know how they look. This is a classic psychological term called “denial”. These men think hairs, and they are hairy, no matter what anyone says.

Norwood 6 and 7Alternatively, some men create bouffants, a puffed up hairdo which is made up by very long hair that is wrapped around the top of the head to look like a normal head of hair. Some of these bouffants are truly amazing and they have often fooled me when they came into the office. Most of these man are either Class 6 or 7 patients and they work the frontal hair, hair by hair, to stick to the upper part of the forehead and combing the hair from behind to a forward direction so that the actual hairline does not show. I remember one man who took it one step further — he cut his hair and let it settle on his bald scalp. I am not sure how it started, but when I saw him, he had a pile of loose hairs, held by the dirt and grime of Los Angeles, to the bald area of his scalp. It worked, at least for the top and crown of his head, but not for the front of his head. This poor man never washed his hair, because the hair would all go down the drain. He used a type of perfume to neutralize any odor from his hair, which actually smelled musty.

So styling, which works for slight hair loss and is very commonly used, is modified over and over again as the hair loss progresses. As over 50% of women over the age of 60 have significant hair loss, the use of puffing up styles, allow the appearance of more as their balding becomes worse. Just go to a retirement community and you will see what I mean. If you realize than almost 50% of men and women over 45 have hair loss, most of them are using styling tricks to make their hair look fuller. Hair thickeners, gels and special hydrating shampoos will increase the thickness of each hair shaft.

It should be clear to regular readers of this site that hair transplantation rarely brings back the hair to normal densities. So the same tricks that are used in those with thinning hair are used by those people who have had hair transplants. On very rare occasions, I have returned the transplanted area to an almost normal density, but that is more the exception to the rule than what I normally do. Many hair transplant doctors would like you to think that you really get your hair back, but that is not the case. I have selected four patient examples with estimates of the actual range of density that they have obtained from hair transplantation. The reason that one might get a higher density return is because the supply is more than adequate to address the balding area demand.

Patient #1 has returned about 80% of his original density at great cost to his donor supply, which has become a bit depleted. His hair is very fine, so more density was necessary for his to get his crew cut hair style.

 

Patient #2 uses a puffed up hair style to create the illusion of hair (he has less than 15% of his original density replaced and is a full Class 6 patterned balding patient).

 

Patient #3 is a full Class 6/7 balding pattern and combs his hair backward to cover the balding in the crown.

 

Styling is part of a hair transplant process which you and your doctor should discuss as part of his informed consent. It is a process that balding men, sooner or later will adopt if they want to look hairier.