How Does a Patient Look When Leaving Your Office After a Transplant? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi there,

I saw screenshots of Jon from Jon & Kate Plus 8 and had some questions:

When a patient leaves the office after the operation, does he just walk out of the office looking like Jon did (in the 3 Immediatley After photos)- without a covering/hat, redness in the forhead, and hair messy?

I just wonder for people that fly into your L.A office for a procedure then fly out straight from surgery- and having concerns about being self concious as they stand in line for the flight back.

It all depends on how bald you are or how much hair you had before the surgery. If you are completely bald, it is hard to not notice some stubble and a few patients may have considerable redness that lasts a few days on the bald scalp, but we provide a hat to cover that easily. In Jon’s case, he was able to cover the transplants by combing his natural hair forward and wearing a hat and also the ‘cover up’ may be dependent upon how you can style your hair. Quite a few patients are undetectable immediately after the surgery.

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Eyebrow Hair Stopped Growing After Waxing! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

(female)
Hello! i use to go and get my eyebrows waxed. The last time i did was about 7 months ago and every since then they haven’t grown back, they are very thin (it looks like i dont have any eyebrows) and there are a few bald spots.. What could of caused that? and is there anyway i can get them to grown back?

If you pluck out your eyebrows all the time, eventually some hairs may never grow back. Think of it as causing small trauma to the hair follicle over and over and eventually the hair follicle will stop producing hair. Wait it out for a full year. If it does not return, you can have a hair transplant to put them back, using hair from your scalp.

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Is Age More Important than Donor Density in Hair Transplant Patients? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hello Dr. Rassman and staff,

Doc thank you for your time, you speak your true feelings and I appreciate it. Ok, I started losing my hair around 19, which wasn’t very fun. Within a few months, I did start taking Propecia. I’m 21 years old right now, Propecia has been working for me but the damage was done early enough. I would say I’m a Class 3 on the Norwood Scale and would someday hope to change that. Personally I would love to have all of my hair back right now but it doesn’t look like that will happen too soon, but I’ll live. The hair loss process actually hasn’t been all bad; it actually has been a good humbling experience for me, although, in the end I plan on winning the battle.

I’m not really looking for a hair transplant in the near future, from what I have read on your website almost every 21 year old isn’t a good candidate. Although, is age always so relevant? I would think the biggest factor would be the donor density. Lets say you have two men who both have the same amount of hair loss (Norwood 4), one in his early twenties and the other in his mid thirties to forties. Wouldn’t a healthy 22 to 24 year old with a high density be a much better candidate than a person who is 35, 40 with an average density?? What’s your opinion on this, also where would someone go and get their hair density tested, would a dermatologist typical offer some type of test?

Donor density and where you are on the balding process are two different variables. Maturity of the balding pattern is also important for that 21 year old you referenced. There are no absolute rules with regard to having a hair transplant, but a bond between doctor and patient is critical in understand the meaning of all of the variables (age, donor density, hair characteristics, donor laxity, etc…) including the maturity and financial stability of the patient considering a hair transplant.

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FUE Scarring? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi Doctor,

If one were to get a FUE or FUE2, and in the future decide to shave it all, will there be left over dotted scars in the back from the donoring?

What kind of scarring can one expect from FUE or FUE2?

Thanks

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PencilYes, any incision made to the scalp will result in a scar of some kind. It is not an entirely scarless procedure and any doctor that tells you there are no scars is feeding you a load of bull. Scarring for FUE will be a small pinhole… like a pencil mark. If your density is low, scarring can be a problem with the follicular unit extraction (FUE) procedure, because the amount of hair to cover the donor excisions will be less. If the density is high, it hides well. Shaving your head like your facial hair, will leave ‘dots’ of white circles measuring between 0.7 – 1mm wide, or if your surgeon used a wider instrument, it will be even wider.

I just saw a patient who had 3300 grafts with a FUE technique by another doctor and the back of the head looked like he was shot with 3300 holes from a pellet gun; few of the grafts grew after a year. Your skin and other factors will determine how visible these scars are with your head completely shaved to skin level — but why would you bother getting a transplant if you’re just going to shave your head anyway?

Any Restoration Robotics Update? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi,

Have you heard any recent news on the robotic hair transplant procedure from Restoration Robotics? I had read a while ago they were conduction clinical trials at the end of this year, but haven’t heard anything since.

Do you know if they are accepting volunteers for the clinical trials? If so I’d be interested in participating.

Thanks

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The last I heard was that they were moving forward with clinical trials on a limited basis, and a Google search reveals that they were hiring for a clinical trials manager just a few months ago (see job listing). There’s info about the trials in a posting at HairSite, although it is from about 6 months ago. Unfortunately, Restoration Robotics doesn’t have a website, so it’s difficult to find a central location for their current news.

The Story of a 3,000 Graft FUE Procedure Failure – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Story time! Although I can’t provide photos (by patient request), I’ll do my best to paint the picture…

A man in his early 20’s flew to Los Angeles from Alaska to see me last month. He already had two hair transplant procedures using the follicular unit extraction (FUE) technique — one surgery of 1,000 grafts, and another of 3,000 grafts — by two different doctors (that I won’t name) who each claim expertise in this process. The 1,000 FUE case by the patient’s estimate was about 50% successful, while the 3,000 FUE case had, according to the patient, no growth after a year. The donor area was heavily scarred from the FUE extractions and were easily seen by lifting up the hair. A strip procedure would have produced less scarring than this patient showed now. To compound the problem, those hairs that did grow from the first surgery were placed in a radial direction (like the spokes of a bicycle wheel) and the hair pointed to the sides, not the normal frontal position. So not only was he dealing with a huge failure of growth, but now he had to deal with poor placement for those grafts that did grow! Imagine a person with hair growing out of his head like the spokes of a bike?

This patient most certainly had a low donor density to start. I recommended a strip surgery to harvest the most grafts he can get and with the reduced donor density, I recommended about 1,300 grafts, which is possibly the most I can harvest. Fortunately, his hair loss was only in the first 1 1/2 inches of the hairline and by taking Propecia he might hold the rest of his hair in place, although there is miniaturization behind the frontal 2 inches, suggesting that he might bald further over time. He wanted to look normal, but I could only suggest that I would try to make him look better.

FUE is not a panacea for scars. As I have said here before, the follicular holocaust that is seen in FUE is substantial, even in the hands of those who claim success. This is a buyer beware market. You should always ask to see a number of patients who had the procedure and look carefully at the donor area. Another FUE procedure on this patient will be disastrous (even in my hands), as scarring is clearly a problem.

I Still Have Redness After My Hair Transplant Years Ago! – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

I had my first transplant almost four years ago and my second one last October. I STILL have redness on my right side from the FIRST transplant. It is almost as if I got sunburned and that area stayed burned. It is not really bad, but it is bad enough that the transplant area still looks “outlined” making it look a little unnatural. The other aspects of the surgeries are spectacular, just have this one issue. Is there anything I can do about it? Thanks!

This is the type of question you should be asking your surgeon. Redness can be helped with the judicious use of topical steroid, but this is not a good idea without medical supervision as the body can absorb the steroids if you use too much of it. Also, the redness should not last that long — certainly not years, as you describe. Please discuss this with your surgeon.

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I Want a Hair Transplant, But I Love Cocaine – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Hi

I’m thinking of having a hair transplant done but I have a question before I bother to consult with you.

I attend college and with college come wild parties. I spend most of my time studying but I do go to atleast one part per month. I usually like to do cocaine at the party. I do this recreationally and it’s only one time per month at most.

I don’t think I would be able to give up my one party per month for a hair transplant. Is it safe to get a hair transplant if you know you are going to be doing a gram of cocaine every month for the post operative period?

CocaineOh boy. So as a physician, did you expect that I’d be fine with telling you its alright to use cocaine at any point, let alone during your post-op period after a hair transplant procedure?! Come on, now. The obvious answer is to stop using illicit drugs, even if it’s just once a month. Cocaine is not only illegal, but it can also kill you.

I’m not your doctor, but I expect any doctor you talk to will have the same reaction to your question. Now that I’ve given my mini-lecture, here’s a link to another site where another physician has his take.

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Had a Hair Transplant a Couple Weeks Ago and Now I See Raised Bumps – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

In mid Dec 08, I had an FUT of 1150 grafts to restore my hairline. Scabs have come and gone and I’ve been left with raised, bumpy, partially numb skin that makes a line across my forehead where the hairs were inserted. Under lighting, this elevated skin is extremely visable and odd looking considering there is no longer any hair there.

Suggestions?

Go see your doctor who performed your surgery. Unfortunately, there is no way to tell with just your descriptive words. More over, I have no way of knowing how your surgery was performed or what technique was used. It may be Follicular Unit Transplantation (FUT), but not all doctors or medical groups perform the same quality surgery.

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Large FUE Case? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Dr. Rassman

What is the largest number of grafts you recommend to be transplanted in one session using FUE? What is the maximum number you guys at NHI have done in one shot using this technique?

Thank you and Happy Holidays to you and your staff.

The largest case we did was 2,800 grafts. The large follicular unit extraction (FUE) cases require high densities of the hair in the donor area. Those individuals who have lower densities generally have from 20-40% less hairs per square inch, so one could expect that yields may be as low as 700 – 1,000 grafts for most — and that is generally people from Asia (like Indians), many from the middle east, and those with African hair. In a Caucasian with an average density, we have done 1300-1500 FUE grafts.

I think that many of you have seen comments made by me — comments of disbelief about the number of FUE grafts claimed to be performed by some dishonest doctors. I’d like to see some more honesty in the industry, but the almighty dollar is more important to some.

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