I’ve Had a Bald Spot My Entire Life – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi I’m a 25 year old male and i have a patch of hair on the side of my head that has never grown in… It is approx 2 inches above my right ear, and it is about 3/4″ to 1″ in diamater. I am not asking about hair loss because my whole life, the spot has been there. I can’t get my hair cut certain ways as this spot makes me very self-conscious. My question is: Would i be able to benefit from a hair transplant even if there was no hair in that spot to begin with? As far as I know, there has never been hair there

This sounds like an ideal case for hair transplantation. So the answer is simply, yes. Follow the rules set up here on how to select a hair transplant doctor. With today’s techniques, you won’t even know that you even had a bald spot with the right surgeon and team.

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Scalp Reduction After Face Lift? – Balding Blog

(female) I read on your site about someone with hairloss after a face lift. I had the procedure also about a year ago and I am left with big long bald areas behind my temples. My question is can SCALP REDUCTION method be perfomed to remove the bald areas as opposed to a hair tranplant?

Thank you

I think that you are telling me that there is hair loss above your ears and behind the temple hairline. If that is the case, hair transplants are the way to treat it. I have done hundreds of women who have had this type of problem after face lifts and brow lifts and the results of this surgery has been excellent. Scalp reductions in this area, however, will be disasterous.


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Can a 56 Year Old Woman Regrow Pubic Hair? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Is it possible for a 56 years old woman to regrow pubic hair?

Regrowing pubic hair may occur with minoxidil applications twice a day. I would take 8 months to find out if it works. Alternatively, hair transplants work 100% of the time in the pubic area.

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Do I Have Any Donor Left After My 10 Hair Transplants? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

From 1998 to 2004 I had about ten transplant surgeries done,and each time I had between 200 – 300 grafts done. After having read your blog the last few months, I now wish I would have had fewer surgeries, and more grafts done at those times. For the most part I am pleased with the results that were achieved, but I would like to have one more transplant surgery to hit those last few problem areas. Is there any way for me to tell if there is any donor area still available? My scars have appeared to have healed well. Since the last surgery I have moved 1500 miles from where my doctor is located, so if I am to have any additional work done I will need to locate a new doctor. I would appreciate your thoughts, and I really enjoy this forum you provide. Thank you.

Your situation requires an in-person examination to learn the opportunities and risks for more hair transplant surgery. The distribution of the scars and the width of the scars will probably dictate what can be done in one more surgery. I have an airfare reimbursement program offered to those traveling from out-of-town (see NHI Travel Program). I would be happy to talk with you over the phone to define your problem and goals.

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Hair Loss InformationMy Doctor Advised Against Washing Recipient Area for 2 Days After Surgery – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

i had a procedure done at another clinic yesterday. they advised against washing the recepient (graph) sites for two days. essentially allowing scabs to heal and fall off two weeks later. I am in the public eye(professional speaker) and had to have a thorough celeaning today. So i di wash my scalp today against there written directions. i was able to see the removal of 75% of the one day old scabs and it looked like 8-10 graphs came out as well. I did not sit under the shower i used the cup pouring method and the gently rubbed the scabbs with my figertips..am i alright or did i maybe wash away my follicles unknowingly? again i saw about 8-10 in my scalp dislodged after the shower. did not look like many came out…no bleeding whatsoever by the way. your thoughts?

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I always have the hair washed within the first day after surgery and offer that process in my office for our patients. The key to a fast recovery is to get the scabs washed off fast. The longer they stay in, the longer you must be gentle with the wash. In the hands of a professional wash, the wounds will be very clean by the very next day. We also wash it vigorously at the end of the procedure to get all of the crusts off quickly. Unfortunately, many doctors do not focus upon getting you looking spiffy in a day after the surgery.

This patient below came in one day after surgery and the pictures were taken immediately after he had his hair washed. The recipient area has an obvious pink hue against his white skin. His native hair was long enough (I told him not to cut his hair prior to the surgery) to cover the entire transplanted area when he combed it forward. White skin shows pink clearly and had his skin color been tan, the pink hue would not show much or at all. As you zoom into the picture, you can see the transplanted grafts and the hair contained in those grafts clearly without any crusts to increase the detection of the transplant in the bald scalp. People who have native hair with grafts transplanted between the hairs have automatic coverage from the native hair and the transplants can be completely hidden. Within a few days, the only evidence of a transplant will be the beard that appears in what is now the pink area. Click the photos to enlarge.



Had a Hair Transplant 3 Months Ago, 80% of Transplanted Hairs Haven’t Fallen Out – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

hello
i had the strip procedure done about 3 months ago with 1500 grafts. within the first two weeks many shafts fell out as is normal, however about 80% of them have not. i am unsure if this is normal and if these grafts will eventually begin to grow.

thank you for your help and this wonderfully informative website.

If the hair is still there but not growing, it just means that the shedding has not taken place. These hairs are dead, but new ones will arise in the next few months. Those dead hairs will eventually shed.

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A Good Hair Transplant Made Great (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Once you have a follicular unit transplant (FUT), if the procedure was done with care, there is no question that the results can’t be detected in any casual encounter, or even on close inspection in most circumstances. Yet with that said, there is still a difference between patient results that go beyond the characteristics of (1) hair shaft thickness, (2) hair character, and (3) hair color.

Let’s take a look at a patient who had two hair transplant procedures. The patient is Dr. Jon Perlman, the well-known Beverly Hills plastic surgeon that has been featured on ABC’s television show, Extreme Makeover. After his first session, he had good results that nicely framed his face when his hair was groomed. But on close examination, his hair was somewhat see-through. Dr. Perlman has very fine hair, so the bulk of each hair shaft was lower than average. By undergoing a second procedure, the bulk was doubled and the results shown in the pictures below say a great deal about the change he experienced. He was more-than-satisfied after the first procedure and thrilled after the second one. A good transplant became a great transplant.

Sometimes patients will tell me something like, “I don’t want it too thick and I am afraid if I put too much hair there, it will look unnaturally thick.” In all of the years of doing this surgery, I have never, ever had a patient who told me that I had made the hair too thick in a single session. We have seen many of our patients (initially satisfied, but wanting more hair) receive another transplant and become transformed back in time to their youthful look. By performing NHI’s pioneering dense packing procedure, we can increase the density of hair in a single procedure, often reducing the number of procedures needed to obtain results like the one shown here, but when the hair is super fine (like the example below) then two sessions may be needed. For many people, hair is like money — the more you have, the better it is.

Click the photos to enlarge.

Before and After 2 procedures (2890 grafts total):

 

For more photos, click “read more” —

Before (left) and immediately after surgery (right):

 

After 1st procedure (1529 grafts):

 

After 2nd procedure (1361 grafts):

 

Any Way to Tell How Many Transplant Hairs Actually Will Yield Growing Hair? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

IS there a correlation between how well transplanted hairs “took” at first, and the eventual yield?

The reason I ask is, I’m about 4+ months out from a 1,200 FUE session and I have seen little/no evidence of growth yet. But, I remember in the first couple weeks after my procedure, I felt and saw a whole lot of hairs as nubs, and they grew a little before falling out. If the hairs held at first, and even grew, can that be an assurance (or at least almost an assurance) that everything was done properly and they’re going to come back and grow for real? or is it still possible to end up with poor yield even if the hair looked real good at first?

At 4 months, I would not have expected much hair to be there. Between the 4-5 month, you should see hair growth and by the 7-8th month you should be in the combable hair stage. By the 12th month, expect over 95% of the grafts to have grown.

It is rare to have no graft growth if your surgery was performed by a doctor with an experienced team. A complete failure of the transplant in the hands of such a team is very rare. Those hairs that appear to grow in the first 2-3 weeks after the surgery (those short hairs that feel like a beard) are really just being shed and contrary to what you see, they are not growing. These hairs sometimes remain in the head and are not shed in the first month, but most times they do not grow either. Any residual hairs that look beard-like will almost all shed by the time the actual transplanted hair grows.

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Hair Loss InformationHow to Tell if You’ve Found the Right Hair Transplant Doctor – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

What is the difference between doctors and the various medical groups performing hair transplants. There appears to be a great deal of competition and as I go between groups, I get confused and overwhelmed.

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If you were looking for a good family doctor or plastic surgeon, you would most likely use certain criteria for selecting one over the other. Fundamentally, you would look for a well credentialed, caring, competent doctor who you like and feel comfortable with. Be sure that the doctor values you as a patient by spending time with you and discussing your agenda freely. Ask yourself if the doctor listened to what you were saying or lectured you about his/her ideas. That doctor must be trustworthy to take on your welfare or your family’s welfare, and not only must you believe in his/her skills, but you should also like him/her as a person. Although the various family doctors and plastic surgeons use physician’s assistants or nurse practitioners to help them manage patient’s needs, the doctor is always ultimately the person in charge, the one whose skills you will eventually depend upon. As most doctors practice in groups, you should feel comfortable with the doctors who work with your doctor in the group that you selected, as sometimes your doctor may be on vacation or off-call when you need him/her the most.

You should expect that physician extenders should be educated as physician extenders (nurses or certified physician assistants, not salesmen). Hair transplantation differs from standard family practice and cosmetic surgery procedures in that there is a team approach to performing surgery. Doing refined follicular unit transplantation takes a team of 3-6 people working together for hours, so the doctor’s team is as important as the doctor is. An old cliché says that a chain is only as strong as its weakest link, so the skills of the doctor as one link of that chain can easily be offset by inexperienced technicians in the surgical team or sloppy processes that are not put together carefully and not focused on the many detailed nuances that produce quality hair transplants. You should feel confidence in the doctor and the team and you should feel ‘integrity’ and trust in soul of that doctor.

In my hair restoration practice, I add many elements to build confidence and establish trust. I have an open practice, where new, potential patients can meet completed hair transplanted patients one-on-one. This offers the opportunity for new patients to probe the process and see up front what they will be getting if we perform the surgery. I focus heavily on patient education, not only by providing copies of some of the important medical articles I have written, but also in spending time with each potential patient (doctor and patient in a private room without a salesman). Then after the visit, I provide a detailed letter summarizing what I learned about the patient’s objectives, and a written Master Plan for what I think will happen to that patient. Fees are openly discussed by the doctor and quotes for surgical fees are put into writing. By far, most of our patients do not have surgery and can be spared surgery with appropriate medications.

NHI is unique in that we have a fully accredited surgical center where all of our surgeries are performed, ensuring safety for patients to the highest national standard. Our surgical center is audited regularly for following hospital quality processes and procedure. Very few (if any) hair transplant facilities adhere to such rigorous standards. Why is that important? Well, it is the patient’s assurance that our sense of quality is judged against the best healthcare facilities in the nation. When you select a medical group for your hair transplant procedure, you should not only know the facility, the staff competence, and longevity of that staff, but also the history of the doctor. Has the doctor been disciplined before the medical board for infractions in any form of conduct? What does the public and his colleagues think about the doctor (available through internet sources)? What is the doctor’s malpractice record? Have you met or spoken to his/her former patients, and if so, what do they tell you about their research prior to taking on this doctor as their doctor-of-choice?

I always tell my patients (and have written on this blog many times before) that there is good news and bad news for the hair transplant patient — simply put, hair transplants are absolutely permanent. Getting it done right the first time is far easier that trying to fix what might not be fixable if it is done wrong. By following this selection process, finding a good doctor should not be difficult. There are many good doctors out there, just be careful not to end up in the wrong place.

I’ve Worn a Hair System for 14 Years – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am a 55 year old, white male with normal crown baldness. I have been wearing a hair system for the last 14 years. Could hair transplantation work for me and what would be the estimated cost?

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See Patient ZU for a good example of a man that wore a hair system for 30 years. He was transplanted and has a wonderful result. The costs depends upon how bald you are. Send me photographs and I will give you some starting points and an estimate.

For more photos of Patient ZU, please click here.