Using Rogaine After a Hair Transplant – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I was using Rogaine with some moderate success. However, I have just had a hair transplant. If I start back using Rogaine, will it: harm the newly transplanted hair? stimulate the new hair’s growth? have no effect?

Thanks!

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If you saw benefits from Rogaine (minoxidil) prior to the hair transplant, you should get back on the drug since withdrawal may cause reversal of those benefits (meaning hair loss). The transplanted hair should not be impacted by minoxidil, but waiting until the scabs fall off is probably the best timing I might suggest. Or you may wish to talk to your transplant doctor about the best timeframe for restarting the medication.

My Newly Transplanted Hairs are Falling Out! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Three months ago I got a hair transplant and over that time the hairs that were put in fell out. Is this transplant going to fail?

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Normally the hairs that are transplanted do fall out in the first few months and then they get replaced by your body at about 3-5 months with new hair. If the transplant is a success, you should see 80-90% of the results in 8 months. Patience is your friend at this point!

Using Toppik to Cover a Transplant Scar? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hey dr. How are you on this fine day ?

i was just wondering on your opinion on using toppik to camouflage a transplant scar so buzzing hair down to a number 1 would be an option with the addition of the use of a trichophytic closure. would this be a viable route for someone who appreciates short hair?

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ToppikI am fine. Thank you for asking.

Some people use Toppik, DermMatch, black marker, or even permanent tattooing with reasonable results. I am not sure if you already have a linear scar or are thinking of having a hair transplant and worried about a scar, but really, successfully camouflaging a scar on the scalp all depends on the scar itself. If the scar is wide (despite a trichophytic closure) a number 1 clipper haircut may still show it somewhat.

I’ve Got More Questions Since My Consult at NHI! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Dr. Rassman,

I wanted to ask you a question about hairlines but first, I wanted to personally thank the staff at NHI, Dr. Pak and you for the wonderful visit I had at NHI this past Friday. This is a bit long winded but please bear with me.

I am a 25 year old caucasian male with light brown hair and am in good health. I started noticing a little thinning at my temples over the last year. To be honest, I was very nervous. I then went from nervous to hysterical. I could not stop thinking about it. Nothing can be more vicious than your own imagination and mine was painting all kinds of horrible scenarios.

In lieu of this, I made several appointments to see various hair transplant doctors here in Southern California. Of course, I never ACTUALLY meet with a doctor. Instead, I ended up talking to a consultant. To be perfectly honest, I did not gain a great deal of insight from these visits. I wanted something empirical to measure my hair loss, a metric I could use to stay informed and make an intelligent decision about my hair loss. None of these visit’s gave me that information.

The balding blog has been a part of my daily routine for a little while now and I decided to do what you suggest in so many of your posts and get my hair mapped for miniaturization and start my master plan. I was looking forward to my visit but also fearing it a little as well. So many things over the last few months have convinced me that I was going to bald to a Norwood class 4, 5 or 6. Pictures I had taken in the last few months, the look of my hair when it is wet or under bright lights. Except for my temples, I looked normal but I felt awful.

Then I came to NHI this Friday and that all changed in about 5 minutes.

I can’t tell you how much better I feel after visiting your office. I made an appointment to see Dr. Pak and he was very informative and understanding. He magnified my donor area for me to show me what non-miniaturized hairs look like. He then moved the scope to various parts of my head. This is the part where I held my breath. However, when he zoomed in on my crown, he saw no miniaturization. The same was true for my vertex and other parts of my head. In fact, the only area that showed any miniaturization was my temples, something my paranoid imagination would not let me believe.

Words can not describe how relieved I was. Dr. Pak was very helpful and he answered all of my questions. However, on my drive home I though of one more question I wished I had asked him and it is this: If none of my hairs, other than my temples, displayed miniaturization then where does my fight against balding go from here?

In your Hair Loss for Dummies Book (page 12) you say the following; “If you’ve inherited this pattern (Class 7), it is usually evident by the time you are 30“. In my examination, Dr. Pak said that my fears about progression to a class 7, 6 or 5 were unwarranted. In fact, he didn’t assign a class at all. He said my hair was healthy all over and my density (2.0) was normal (only miniaturization at the temples).

Am I simply developing a mature hairline? In this post from your blog you say that the mature hairline develops from ages 17-29. I guess what I am trying to understand is the correlation between someone’s age and their degree of miniaturization. At 25, is it too early or difficult to diagnose what class I may (if ever) progress to? Could a Norwood 7 be a lot easier to spot at my age that say, a norwood 3 or 4? I only ask because if I don’t progress any further in the next 5 to 10 years, would some moderate temple restoration be out of line with FUE?

I am 25, but I am not so naive as to think that the battle is over. I do not intend to let anyone else touch my hair except NHI now that I have visited your office. Dr. Pak put me on finasteride and I fully intend to visit your office on an annual basis to check on my hair. Like you say, tenacity and diligence.

Sorry again for the long winded question and many, many thanks to Dr. Pak and you for keeping me informed about my hair loss and educating me before I gave into my fears and did something drastic and foolish.

Sincerely and respectfully

If at any point in the future you want to address only the front corner areas, you can always do so with a small hair transplant procedure using FUE.

You may have a maturing hairline… perhaps in combination with slight recession in the corners. It remains to be seen as you age, but take comfort that Dr. Pak did not see miniaturization beyond the front corners. Stick with the medication and we’ll see you again for your follow-up appointment.

Finally, thank you for the kind email and allowing us to publish it.

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Amazing Results from Body Hair Transplants? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I have a question regarding hair transplants. I have come across this link on youtube.

This doctor claims to be an expert when it comes to extracting hair from the body. He even has some videos where he extracted 20,000 hair. I’ve seen the videos and the results look awesome. If I can get results like the videos maybe I might consider visiting him in the future. However, before I step forward I need your advise on whether these results are a form of deception or not ? Can this doctor really give such amazing results ? Should I consider this option for the future. Since I am from an Indian background I have a lot of hair in other areas besides my head.

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I personally do not believe in performing body hair transplants and have written about the problems with this type of procedure many, many times. The body hair transplant results that I’ve seen in person were not flattering, but these do look good. I can be a skeptic at times and if it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is.

If you are looking for an endorsement of Dr. Umar, I cannot give that to you because I have not reviewed his work. If you are convinced these results are amazing then perhaps you should see him. But before you decide to go through with the surgery, I’d ask to meet patients that have already had it done so you can judge the results for yourself in person.

I Don’t Care About Future Hair Loss, I Want a Transplant Now! – Balding Blog

i am a 19 yr old male, almost 20, and since i was 16 my hair has receded near the temple points. my hair line now resembles a narrow V. i style my hair in a way that gives me a youthful look and it covers it well, however i am wanting to get a transplant so that i may have a beautiful hairline. doctors have told me that i am too young but i dont care, if i get the hairline reconstructed and the rest of the hair continues receding, so long as i have a real hairline i dont mind wearing a hairpeice if it comes to that…what do u think?

If you are losing this much hair at such a young age, it is not a good sign. There is a risk that you may go on to lose all of your hair before you are 30 years old. Despite what you may think, you will still care how you look like when you are 30 years old (or 40, 50, even 80 years old for that matter). You have to accept the fact that hair transplant surgery in itself is not a complete solution to your problem. What I mean by that is you will never look like or have the “beautiful” hair you had when you were 16 years old. Just as your face will change, your body weight will change, and you will constantly adapt to different styles and looks over your lifetime. The same goes for your hair. As you lose more hair you will adapt and change your hair style to make it look full.

While hair transplant surgery can certainly address the balding and receding hairline, you have to think about how you may look like with more hair loss and think about the worst case scenario. This is what we mean when we often talk about the Master Plan involved when a patient decides to have a hair transplant surgery.

If you are sure you will go bald and you are totally fine with wearing a hair piece, then surgery to the front hairline and front area of the scalp can be a good compromise to give a full and natural look that blends in with a hair piece. But until you are 100% sure of this, I would wait. Surgery at such a young age can precipitate accelerated “shock hair loss” from the trauma of the surgery itself and your existing hairs will fall out faster than they otherwise would’ve and you will end up looking worse.




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Getting More Permanent Hair from the Scalp? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Dr. Rassman,

Excellent blog. I read it every day and would love to add my question to the plethora of information available.

I have a question about donor supply. I of course understand that when it comes to strip harvesting, you can only cut out so much of the skin, and that only some of the hair at the back, below a certain line, is permanent. But I’d like to know why after using up all the available donor hair with reference to what you can get with the strip-cup method, you can’t go in and take more grafts via the FUE method. There is still plenty more permanent hair at the back and although it might be too low to cut into because of the nerves and muscles, using tiny punches to get it out I’m guess wouldn’t have negative affects.

Thinning out the sides too would I think also have the advantage of not only providing more donor hair, but it would also make the transplanted area not look as thin in comparison since you’re making this “thick” permanent zone thinner.

With doctors performing FUE where ever there is hair, even body hair, I’d like to know why you can’t just go after more permanent hair that you still have in the back of your head and on the sides.

Thanks!

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Doing a strip harvest for the first hair transplant surgery and a follicular unit extraction (FUE) at a later time is generally not advisable, as you limit the donor density with the FUE. Essentially, you’re asking why doctors don’t try to thin the donor area as much as possible, but for many people having the sides and back of the head looking sparse would also be a problem. Then again, everyone is different and I would rather not make a rule without knowing your situation. If you start with strip harvesting, you should finish with strip harvesting if you go for another procedure.

Transplanting Hair Between Identical Twins – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hello Dr!

I just had a quick question. I have a NW 3 vertex balding pattern, but so does my identical twin. Would you ever consider transplanting hair from one twin to another? Not against his will of course! I can see an ethical delimma on the future situation of the twin donor if he ever changes his mind, so I was curious what you would do in this situation.

Yes, we have done this on one occasion. Twins have to be identical twins (exact same DNA) and not fraternal twins. If one wants to donate to another, it’s their choice and wishes. I would want to know both of the twins and understand the reason for transplanting from one to the other.

In a Norwood Class 3 pattern, there is really no need to take from one twin and move it to the other. The recipient area is easily covered with a single surgery in many patients and the use of finasteride will keep the hair loss from advancing in most cases. I understand, however, your desire to keep it in the family so set up an appointment with a good doctor to cover these issues in great detail.

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Density – FUE Versus FUT – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

One aspect puzzles me. In FUT a strip is removed and closed so a part of the scalp vanishes and is replaced by a thin scar. The areas adjoining the scar retain their hair density and very often with trichophytic closure hair grows out of the scar, again with no reduction in density.

In FUE follicular units are harvested individually. No large scar is generated but hundreds (thousands?) of tiny ones. However (and this is my main point), donor area density is reduced because the scalp from where the hair is removed does not vanish and is essentially now a tiny bald spot.

Does this mean FUE thins out the donor area in return for not creating a long FUT scar? Is that the trade-off?

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Thanks for asking, as this can be a bit abstract.

When you remove a strip of hair (say 1/2 inch wide by 4 inches long) you are effectively removing skin and pulling the scalp from top and bottom. This in effect stretches the scalp/skin along with the hairs. So if you have a very, very precise measuring tool of hair density before and after the surgery, then you will definitely see a decrease in hair density after the surgery… but this reduction in density is very low and not perceptible to the naked eye.

When follicular unit extraction (FUE) is performed, many hundreds and thousands of hairs are taken out (and never grow back on that spot) so it is easy to see how this would also reduce the donor density.

I Have to Take Medication That Causes Hair Loss – Balding Blog

A bit complex. I am a 47 y/o male. In good shape. Been slowly balding on the top of my head for 8 years.

Had a kidney transplant 4 months ago. Not related to diabetes. Donor was Brother. Take Prograff 2mg 2x a day. Started Testosterone thereapy 2 months ago. Very low levels. started with Androgel 5 mg. daily. Stopped that…Now on Testosterone Cyp 200mg every 21 days. The Testosterone does make me feel much better. I would rather not stop taking it. And the Prograf, I cannot stop… Hair is falling out fast for the last 2 months!

A side effect of Prograf is hair loss. A side effect of Testosterone therapy is hair loss. Is there any way to combat this? Would a hair transplant work or would it just fall back out again from the medications that I take? Any help you may be able to offer is greatly appreciated.

Kidney transplamtAs a male, it is possible that the impact of testosterone may be offset by Propecia (finasteride). Propecia may also have some beneficial effects on the general genetic balding process, but you need to discuss this with your doctor before doing anything.

Hair transplants may help if you have patterns of distinct balding, as the transplanted hairs (which do not have the genetic components of balding) may be able to resist the hair loss caused by the anti-rejection medications taken for your kidney transplant.




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