Hair Loss InformationThe “Sean Connery” of Hair Restoration? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello, doctor. I do not mean any disrespect in my question, but I do believe it is an important one. I am considering surgical hair transplantation, and I’ve heard that you are one of the better surgeons in Los Angeles. My concern… my question is, how old are you? I ask this for two reasons. (1) Have you passed your surgical peak? (2) Will you be there in a couple of years when I may conisder another procedure?

Thank you. Again, no disrespect intended, but I am looking for a relationship with a physician who is not only qualified but who will be there when I need them.

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What crystal ball does anyone of us have? Do you know when you cross the street that you will make it to the other side and not get hit by a car?

I am 63 years young. I have performed surgery on a couple of billionaires this past year and a number of top celebrities, one head of state, many CEOs of large companies, four patients from the TV show Extreme Makeover, construction workers, a bus driver, a grandmother and a mother of 7 kids, and many others who asked similar questions. My health is good, my maternal grandmother lived to 114, my maternal grandfather died at work when he was 102, my father’s grandmother lived to 99, and many uncles and aunts lived into their 80-90s. Like Sean Connery, I like to think that I get better with age. Mr. Connery turned 75 a few months ago, so he’s got many years on me yet.

I received the hair restoration industry’s equivalent to the Acadamy Award for Best Actor, called the Golden Follicle Award in 2004 at age 62, published the FUE technique when I was 59, and am probably one of the few doctors world-wide who does it well today. The FUE technique has to be the most taxing surgery in hair restoration that there is. I wrote chapters in text books and published scientific and other papers in the past 18 months numbering about a half dozen. I can not run the marathon (nor could I when I was 23), bench press some 500 pounds (also not able to do it when I was 23), or sprint the 100 yard dash (no comment is needed here but for that I am clearly out of shape). However, I ski regularly, scuba yearly to depths of 100 feet, ride my bike about 16 miles a day when I am not over-working and can play the piano for hours (my fingers, at least, hold up well). I can work longer hours than any of my staff and can get along on 3 hours of sleep per night if I must. If you get a younger doctor, ask to see patients of his/her which were done this year. I can show off many of my patients (which we do monthly) at our open house events and have done it for 14 years consistently. I tend to take my responsibility seriously, and have often helped my patients through many personal health crisis that were unrelated to their hair transplant. One patient of mine stands out (age 44) when he discovered that he had John Ritter‘s vascular diagnosis (actor known best for his role in “Three’s Company”). Mr. Ritter died just a few days from his 55th birthday from a rupture of his ascending aortic, so I became involved in the diagnoses and open heart surgery decisions that saved my patient’s life from Ritter’s fate. There is no doubt that had this patient not had a hair transplant, his diagnosis would probably have not been made and as his cardiac surgeon told him, he probably would have died in a year or so. If you would like, I can ask this patient for a reference that would back up this claim.

When you get to my age, you appreciate people for their value, hopefully gain wisdom, and with wisdom should come temperament that allows an artist to perform finer work, perfect his art, and refine and hone judgments that generally take years to define (just like Sean Connery has done for acting). I believe that what I bring is judgment and wisdom to my patient’s problem and potential surgery, and provided that my vision holds out and my hands remain as steady as they have for the past 35 years of doing surgery (from war torn Vietnam, to orthopedic, vascular, and general surgery), I fully expect to be doing hair transplants for some time, at least, on a selective basis.

Come meet with me and judge for yourself:

  1. if you like me
  2. if you respect me
  3. if you trust me
  4. if you think that I will be around for the duration of your needs

Your call, of course. When and if you come, please refer to this blog answer as I would love to connect with you, see the smile on your face and understand your motivation for writing this question to me. At the least, I enjoyed writing this answer, and at the most, maybe we will have things in common. I have made many friends amongst my patients, including many who did not ask traditional questions when they met with me.

Hair Loss InformationScalp Aches After Laser Therapy – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am a 23 yr old male, suffering from thinning hair. I went to a Dr, and he gave minoxydil as part of the treatment, and laser therapy as the other. He uses a laser pen like device, and runs it through my scalp for about 15 min. Well my question is that: everytime he does the laser therapy, my scalp aches a bit. I told him about it, and he says that it is normal, but i need more reassurance.
Thank you

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I am unfamiliar with this “laser pen” he is using, but if you think that the aching follows the use of the laser pen, then I would believe that the laser pen is the cause. Perhaps it would be helpful to read my past blog entries regarding the use of lasers in hair therapy, and more specifically, this blog entry about Low Laser Light Therapy. I’m sorry I couldn’t be more helpful, but if you could get me the actual name of the device, I might be able to research it further.

Happy Holidays! – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am taking a few days off, so there will be no updates until Tuesday, December 27th.

Wishing you a Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Happy Kwanzaa, or whichever holiday you may be celebrating this time of year!

If you happen to be reading this during the holiday season, be sure to scroll down to read the latest blog entries…

Happy Holidays!

 

Hair Restoration Societies and Accreditations – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am researching the hair transplant doctors to find someone I want to tie my hitch to. On your New Hair site I noticed that you had four links at the bottom of the left column. Why do you link to them and what is the significance? Some doctors have similar links on their sites, but I haven’t seen the AAAHC triangle logo before.

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Here’s a little on each external link you’re referring to, as found on the New Hair Institute homepage:

  1. The Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care (AAAHC) is one of two national accreditation agencies for surgical centers. The “accreditation from this organization is a voluntary process through which an organization is able to measure the quality of its services and performance against nationally recognized standards. The accreditation process involves self-assessment by the organization, as well as a thorough review by the Accreditation Association’s expert surveyors, who themselves have extensive experience in the ambulatory health care environment. The accreditation certificate is a symbol that an organization is committed to providing high-quality health care and that it has demonstrated that commitment by measuring up to the Accreditation Association’s high standards.” I believe that our clinic is the only fully accredited HAIR TRANSPLANT facility in the United States (other than those that have plastic surgical accreditation) that has taken the effort to obtain such recognition. The reviewers have always rated our service as meeting or exceeding the best standards in the country.
  2. The International Alliance of Hair Restoration Surgeons (IAHRS) is an organization of physicians who have banded together setting a standard for the industry’s standard of care, the Follicular Unit Transplant.
  3. The American Hair Loss Association (AHLA) is an organization focused on consumer education.
  4. The International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS) is a non-profit medical association of over 700 physicians specializing in alopecia and hair loss. The ISHRS provides continuing education to physicians specializing in hair transplant and restoration surgery and gives the public the latest information on medical hair restoration and non-surgical treatment for hair loss.

I believe in excellence, whatever the cost. There are no shortcuts to delivering a quality product. I have a terrific staff and pay them well so that they have a quality life at home and can focus upon my patients when they come to work. For this reason, I retain 100% of those that I want to retain and many have been with me for more than a decade. The AAAHC (a completely voluntary effort that is a very costly process for us and equates to the rigorous standards imposed upon hospitals today) is a way that I guarantee to myself that our standard matches the best standards in the world. To comply with these standards, I calculated that my annual cost exceeds $100,000/year and both of our offices are certified by the AAAHC. Our focus upon supporting national and international hair restoration / hair loss societies (like IAHRS, ISHRS, and AHLA) are reflective of our patient and physician educational efforts, which should be supported by those in this industry. Our involvement with them is consistent with the massive efforts we have made over the years to innovate (leading the standards that are accepted and adopted by everyone of value in the industry) and force an improving hair restoration environment along with others who share this objective. See the History of NHI and the NHI Timeline for more.

Doctor Recommendation in Texas? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Received 2 questions asking about Texas doctor recommendations…

Dr. Rassman,
My son who is 20yrs. old is experiencing significant hair loss. Is there a doctor in the Houston area that you could recommend for him to see to receive the correct treatment for his hair loss.
Thanks

im looking for a good hair restoration facility in austin texas , can you direct me to a good one?

Take a look at the ISHRS.org website’s physician search to find a doctor in your area. I believe there are more details on the ISHRS site. I have seen some wonderful work by Alfonso Barrera, MD in Houston at (713) 468-5200 who is a Houston based plastic surgeon. You can have him travel to Los Angeles and his air fare would largely be covered through our reimbursement program. If you consider this last option, I would certainly have him send me pictures and set-up a telephone consultation with me ‘personally’ by calling my office at 800-639-4247.

Hair and Love – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Will my wife love me the same after a hair transplant?

On first blush, this could be conceived as a funny question, but I thought hard about it and looked back on my experience with hair restoration and relationships. There is clearly a connection best exemplified by one patient story, which says it all…

A 50 year old successful, powerful bald man (Class 6 pattern with a runway on his head) had two hair transplants, each time accompanied by his caring and loving wife. I got to know them personally and his personality was the type that would stand out in a room with 100 other men. He had a dynamic character with a warm side to his powerful presence. After two transplants with me of around 5,000 grafts, he finished his restoration and appeared happy. A year after I last saw him as a patient, his wife came to my office when she was on a business trip to Los Angeles. She said, “I owe you an apology”. I could not understand the statement and probed her for clarification. “I do not know if you realized that I was against the hair transplant from the onset, but I would never challenge him in public so I kept this a secret between he and I. I loved him without hair as much as I did when I married him with hair years ago. Now that he has his hair back, I realized that the bald man I was married to had changed over the years, but with his hair back he became more like the man I married. I realized that this hair transplant was about him, his vision of himself and not about me at all. I was selfishly looking at the inside man I love, but his pain was created by the outside man he saw in the mirror. The man I married came back with the hair transplant and it made our relationship far better than I could remember in years. I never realized the pain that his balding caused, and that is why I am apologizing to you.”

This story has always stuck in my head, because it reflected the reason men have their hair transplanted in the first place. A woman who loves her man, cares about what is important to him. To conclude with an answer to your question, she will love you more if you love yourself more and are more self-confident. Men who are free to love and who are not burdened with an image of themselves that interferes with who they are, make better lovers than men with an image problem of themselves, no matter how small. Loving these men with their freedom is easier than watching them be less than they can be.

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Doctor Recommendation in Boston Area? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello Doctor,
Thank you for a great website. I find it very informative. I’m 25, male. I have been losing hair for almost 2 years now. My frontal hair is shaped like an M now. I’m thinking of consulting a dermatologist or some doctor like yourself and find out what’s the best treatment for my case, but not sure who to approach. I live in boston, Massachusetts. Do you know any good doctor or any colleagues of yours in this area that reliable enough that I can go to? Do you think it’s better to consult a dermatologist first or just take the propecia? Greatly appreciated for your help.

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Dr. Robert Bernstein in NY is my favorite, as I have seen his results over and over again through the past years. At least with him, you can go to an open house and get a consultation on the same day. The trip from Boston by train is a nice ride.

Propecia must be prescribed by a doctor, so you’ll need to see someone first. You can generally find doctors who specialize in hair restoration surgery through ISHRS.org. Just be sure to do your research.

Itch on Scalp from Rat Mites? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

For a couple of months now, my head has been extremely itchy, and my hair is falling out much more than it should be. I don’t have any bald spots, the hair just falls out all over the head. The itch is so intense and sometimes it feels 100 times worse than the itch from headlice. I’ve been to the dr’s twice, and hairdresser and many friends have checked, all have confirmed that i don’t have headlice. My 2 teenagers just told me tonight that they have been having the same symptoms. Hair also can just pull out without feeling a thing. I’m making another dr’s appointment, but i think the dr might think it’s all in my head (no pun intended). He says my scalp is in great shape, no flaking or anything. I’m just more concerned now that 2 of my kids are complaining of the same thing. Someone suggested it could be something called rat mites. We do have a lot of mice in our house, as we live in the country, now i’m wondering if rat mites could be the problem. Thanking You in advance for your reply

That certainly is an interesting one. You should look into finding someone that specializes in skin problems, rather than just a general practitioner. I would see a good dermatologist and have your scalp and hair evaluated. There is a hair pull test that the doctor can do for you, which I would recommend having done rather than going to the Orkin or Terminex folks to get your head fumigated. Clearly, fomr my answer, you can see that this is not an area of my expertise.

Doctors Who Treat Themselves – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

“HI DR. RASMAN, I was thinking of you today and I have to tell you something that makes me and it should all the people are there just how important hair really is and the importance of taking propecia. Here is a DR. 63 yrs old who takes propecia still and really doesn’t have to for many reasons…. it is probably a good bet 99% chance his hairloss has stopped. This DOC also has ha made made money in his transplant clinic and has more than enough to get get more transplants if needed, and has good friends like Bernstein that would do more transplants if he need them for nothing. This DR. is a good guy but will not even take that little bit of chance of losing more hair. I think if he still takes propecia then beyond shadow of doubt none of us with hairloss issues should skip a day and not take our propecia… do you know who this Doc is??????? I BET YOU DO !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANKS

The above email is from one of the prolific writers to this blog. Of course, I am 63 years old and I do take Propecia. Having had scalp reductions years ago (a big mistake) and two sets of hair transplants, I want to hold on to what I have. As I have already stated, I do not work for the drug company Merck. In fact, I do not work for any drug company.

Laser Treatments to Remove Gray Hair – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Is there any effective way to remove or reduce gray hair permanently? I tried 3 laser treatments & noticed very little change except a reduction in my wallet!

Where are you trying to remove the gray hair from? Generally, gray hair has less pigment cells and less pigment in the shafts so it will be more resistant to laser destruction.

Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

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