Hair Loss InformationI Took Steroids, So Would I Benefit From a Transplant? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

dear doctor.
I am 29 yrs old, I took steroids about 10 years back because I was heavily into bodybuilding and competing. I noticed I started to lose hair so I stopped and went on finasteride which my doctor gave me. I have been on the drug for about 10 years with moderate success, other people cannot see the balding but I can. As I was going bald I would take pictures of my scalp when my head was shaved and I noticed I was thinning in the classic horse shoe pattern with sort of like a thick bridge of hair in the middle of my scalp going from ear to ear but minor thinning in the crown and front part. Since I know my pattern already from taking steroids, would I benefit from a transplant or since I know my final pattern at my age its not worth it?

Thank you, I do hope to hear from you, please.

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As you are now off the steroids and have been for some time, you will be treated as any other balding patient. Of course, you took some steps backward with hair loss that may never return, but that does not mean it is hopeless.

A visit to a doctor’s office who cares about you and has the requisite skills in the hair restoration filed would be your best option. What you need is a good Master Plan for short and long term hair loss management.

Blood Flow to Grafts After Multiple Hair Transplants? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Is there any research that shows that blood flow to the grafts could be compromised or growth delayed with multiple procedures as compared to the first procedure? Is it possible that multiple procedures can outstrip the blood supply necessary to insure maximum growth and thus limit graft survival?

Does every patient with multiple procedures always see a stubble of erupting hair coming in between their hairs after 3-6 mos.?

The reason I ask is that I don’t recall seeing any stubble on my 2nd procedure and am concerned as whether I will see any for my 3rd. It was easy to see on my first procedure.

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The blood supply on the third procedure should be as good as the first procedure.

The presence of any immediate stubble reflects retention of the hair shafts after a hair transplant, not growth. Growth should come in at about 4-5 months and the stubble that you detected after the first hair transplant, if it did not fall out by the time the hair grew, will be forced out by the growing hair. I don’t know anything about your procedures, but it’s possible that it was easy to see growth after the first transplant simply because you had less hair in the area.

Hair Loss InformationIs There Research Into Manipulating Body Hair Growth Cycles? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hey good sir I hope your day and your new year are treating you well. I recently read on your blog that you were in Antartica. Just out of curiosity how was your trip? Would you recommend visiting there? I am just curious because I never hear of anyone going down to Antarctica electively.

Also I had a hair related question. Instead of trying to create completely new hairs from an existing scalp hair, why dont researchers work on manipulating the growth cycles of body hair and other sources of donor hair extraneous from scalp hair? I understand that this hair maybe contextually different but would it not offer the patient some sort of cosmetic value?

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My trip to Antarctica was interesting, to say the least. Lots of penguins of all sizes and colors, a few seals and whales, and some very nice scenery. There were long periods at sea, so I sat down with a good set of books on my Kindle and filled the days well.

As for body hair transplantation, some doctors have been doing hair transplants to the scalp using body hair and the results are less than ideal. Leg hair, for example, has a 60% telogen cycle… which means that these hairs stay “sleeping” most of the time. While they are sleeping, they are not visible above the skin. To the point of your question — I don’t know who, if any, research groups are working on changing the hair cycle in body hair.

What Would You Do if Propecia Was Hypothetically Pulled from the Market? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Always great to see this site up and running. Thank goodness you did not pull a “Merck.” Let me segue then into the question: Let’s say that you were practicing HT’s ten years from now and it turned out data showed that finesteride’s long term effects were more detrimental to libido, erectile issues, etc. than previously reported, and the drug was pulled from the market as a hair loss fighter. All things being equal to today’s other hair loss products, would this alter your approach to certain patients?

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There was no Propecia on the market in the early 90s, so young men would get hair transplants anyway and many would suffer from shock loss (especially those under 25 years old). Then the doctors chased the hair loss as the eventual pattern of each patient emerged. I guess the same would happen in 10 years or hair transplants would become a dying industry. Knowing some of the less honorable doctors, denial of the accelerated hair loss might be a pattern to keep up payments on big houses and expensive cars, but for the most part, I suspect that the demand for many repeat procedures will become the trend in the long term.

As long as we’re playing with hypotheticals, I’d hope that in the next decade there would be advances in treating balding that might make medication unnecessary.

Hair Loss InformationHair Transplant Now, Shaved Head in the Future – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I don’t mind shaving my head in future when hair loss develops, but not now. What I want to have is a hairline to frame my face even if I shave my head.

Is there any technique performed by any surgeon which does not leaves VISIBLE scarring on the back of your head? If I want my head shaved in future, what do you advice me?

I’ve thought of FUE + (ScalpMicroPigmentation on the tiny dots) when I finally shave my head. What do you think about it?

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Not everyone will have very visible scarring, but any wound to the scalp will leave a scar to some degree. Just to what degree you will scar, I have no way to know.

The combination of follicular unit extraction (FUE) and Scalp Micropigmentation (SMP) does work… but with that said, you need to be evaluated by a real expert to know where you stand.

Sex After a Hair Transplant? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello,

I recently received a transplant of 2500 graphs. The day after the transplant I had sex and was wondering if the increase in blood pressure to the head may have dislodged any of my graphs.

There was no unusual bleeding nor was my transplant area touched.

As with all your first time hair transplantation-ees, I am concerned that I may have adversely impacted the recover process.

Comments?

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I doubt that any problems were produced. I generally tell my patients if they must undergo sex right after a hair transplant, try to be a bit more passive in the process. Full active sex is safe after about 3 days.

Is Scarring Common at the Recipient Sites? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Thank you for the time and effort you put into answering all of our questions. My question regards scarring. I have heard some people say that scar tissue forms where the hairs are implanted during a transplant, and that this can result in bumps or raised spots on the hairline. Is this true? If so, is it common? If not, why don’t scars form where the hairs are implanted? After all, a wound of sorts must be made to implant the hair, so how would do you prevent hundreds or thousands of scars from forming after a hair transplant?

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With the technique we pioneered, we do two things that minimize recipient site scarring —

  1. We make very small wounds in the skin, essentially slits that approximate the size of the grafts. These heal very fast.
  2. When preparing the grafts for implantation, we cut off the skin disk at the skin level. To minimize the skin disk, we remove the top layer of the graft skin from the surface of the graft. This prevents the skin from surviving the transplant which could, in some individuals, produce the bump seen in recipient areas. The same process is done with grafts taken from strip surgery.

When doctors use grafts that have a larger surface area than what I described above, the bumps you referenced get more prominent. We have seen from the old days when plugs were done and the graft sizes ranged from 3-5 mm across, the skin always was deformed. Clearly the more skin that survives at the top of the graft, the more detectable will be the existence of the transplanted graft.

Actor Joe Rogan’s Hair Transplant? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Joe RoganI was listening to the Joe Rogan podcast and was really surprised when he mentioned that he won’t shave his head because he had a transplant a few years ago and has a scar. I always wondered why he DIDN’T have a transplant when I would see him on TV but was kind of surprised that he says he had one. Do you think he was misinformed as to what his eventual loss would be?

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Your guess is as good as mine. I do not know the circumstance of actor/comedian/host Joe Rogan’s hair loss or the treatment he had. It’s possible that he had the surgery many years ago and had continued hair loss, but I really don’t know.

Someone might mention to him that we can treat his scar with either a scar revision or Scalp MicroPigmentation (SMP).

Hair Loss InformationWith Shock Loss a Possibility, Is the Best Transplant Candidate Mostly Bald? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

IDOC.. let me see if I have this correct. Having a transplant in an area where there is still a fair amount of hair increases the odds of shock loss? if i want to get a head start and restore my hairline as its thinning but still have hair, the trauma from the surgery will most likely cause shock loss to the existing hair in that area. Is that right? So the best candidate is one who has little hair in the area to be transplanted?

Is anyone still testing A Cell therapy for hair restoration?

Thanks

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Broken recordThose who are at the highest risk for shock loss include:

  1. Patients with noticeable hair loss that is active at the time of surgery
  2. Patients that are younger than 30 years old
  3. Patients that have significant miniaturization of hairs in the balding pattern.

When such patients are on finasteride, the risk for shock loss is reduced.

I know I sound like a broken record at times, but everyone is different and every individual case is unique. There is no universal answer to this question. Some wait until they are bald before they have hair transplant surgery. Some have surgery as they are balding (to maintain their existing look). Shock hair loss is always an issue, but not an overriding one after all the factors are considered… as long as you and your doctor are realistic about shock hair loss. Some overreact or misinterpret what shock hair loss really is, and make it out to be an overbearing issue. But this is a generalization. Please read this recent post on shock hair loss. We do take it seriously, but we also take it on a one-on-one basis. That is why we have a real doctor- patient examination and consultation before any surgery.

With respect to ACell, we have conducted the one year study for hair restoration, but it was a failure. As far as I know, no doctor has been able to reproduce the results claimed by Dr. Hitzig or Cooley on hair multiplication. That is probably why you are not reading about it in scientific journals or in the mainstream media as the next great breakthrough. I don’t know which doctors are still experimenting with it, though.

Hair Loss InformationElectrolysis of Hair Transplant Results – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Can I use hair removal if I decide my transplants just aren’t looking right? I am just trying to figure out what my options are to undo the surgery.

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I met with a patient a couple years ago who had frontal hair transplants at a clinic with results that did not meet his expectations. He responded by going through electrolysis and removing the grafts. He came to my office to figure out what to do with the linear scar.

The results of the tedious electrolysis was very good, but in our experience, electrolysis is very dependent upon the skill of the person doing it. The means the results from this process can vary considerably. The use of hair removal lasers also can be a problem particularly if the grafts are large since they leave an abnormal “foot print” in the skin once the hair is gone.