What Do Fewer Grafts Look Like If You Can’t Afford More? (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am what you call a Class 7 pattern with black hair. I am 55 years old and I dye my hair black. I know that if I came to see you, you would want to do thousands of grafts, but I am a bus driver and just would not be able to afford a large transplant. I might save up enough for a second surgery, but I would want to enjoy the hair while I am still young. I just got a divorce and want to start dating so my bald head really bothers me.

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I am going to show you a Class 7 patient who is about your age with just about the same problem you had. Although I would have recommended 3,000 grafts because of the large balding area, I gave this man 1677 grafts instead. Here are photos of his before and after (1 year) results. Click to enlarge.

 

He has a frame for his face and uses a ‘comb-back’ to cover the area which was not transplanted. After a year, it almost covers the entire bald area. Many doctors are reluctant to perform smaller sessions on people like you, but with a good artistic feel, the doctor should and can produce an acceptable result in one session (in most circumstances) with a thin look (as if he is losing his hair). It is important for prospective patients to be aware of these results. They can help by not dying the hair black and keeping it either salt and pepper or white, or even go sandy blonde, as it will always look fuller.

Please also note the scar on this man. We used a trichophytic closure of his wound with exceptional results, but as I have said before, the wounds are a reflection of not just the surgeon’s skills and the techniques used, but also the healing ability of the patient. Scar photo below. Click to enlarge.

Difference Between Norwood Class 7 Patients (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Why is there such a difference between these two previous post’s photographs. They are both, by your report, Class 7 patients.

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Norwood class 7 Thanks for asking this great, insightful question.

The rim of hair in a Class 7 balding pattern contains about 30,000-35,000 hairs. Considering that the normal total hair count of an adult is about 100,000 hairs, the only permanent hair that is never lost in any balding man, is the 3 inch high rim of hair schematically shown on the right (Norwood Class 7 pattern). The art of hair transplantation that I will show you below, reflects the way the surgeon redistributes these 30,000 (or less) hairs so that it looks like more than it is. The surgeon needs all of the help he/she can get from the characteristics of the hair on the patient’s head, including the quantity that can be safely moved.

The texture of the hair in these two patients is very different. The white/grey haired man (let’s call him ZU) has a hair shaft thickness that is easily three times the hair bulk (weight) as the blonde fellow (and for the sake of consistency, we’ll call him BF). The hair of ZU has a good character to it and holds a wave nicely, while BF has hair that lies limp and wimpy. Also, the donor supply of ZU is easily twice as good as BF and has a loose scalp which allows the surgeon to redistribute more hair from the permanent rim of hair around the sides and back. ZU received almost 10,000 grafts with easily 23,000 hairs in these grafts, while BF had only 4500 grafts (about 8,000 hairs). BF’s scalp was tight and his hair density was not as good as ZU. With that understanding, re-read the blog post titled Patient’s Guide — How Many Grafts Will I Need?, and it should be easy to see that we are not all created equal and the surgeon’s hands are ‘tied’ by patient’s hair characteristics (weight, texture, color, quantity) and therefore the hair transplant surgeon is not in control of every variable he/she needs. When putting the patient’s final results side-by-side, ZU has easily 8-9 times the amount of hair bulk (# of hairs and bulk) as BF. What is very important for you, the reader, to recognize here is that even BF is thrilled with his results. The thinly covered crown in BF (both men use a comb-back hair styling technique) is not of a concern for BF, because he looks at the man in the mirror and does not see his hair from behind. ZU also has a comb-back (which I showed in these photos by allowing the hair that is combed back to separate so you can see the scalp) with much better coverage of his crown area. ZU also had a considerable amount of hair transplanted into the crown, making his grooming easier and his crown looking fuller. From BF’s point of view, that man he sees in the mirror has a full head of groomable hair, just like ZU.

It is also important to note that these men started getting hair transplants at different points of their hair loss. ZU was already completely bald when he started getting transplants, where BF was thinning rapidly and on his way to being completely bald (it happened a few years before Propecia became available). So ZU had nothing on his scalp when we began transplanting his head, and BF eventually lost all of his natural hair up top (so what you see in the photos for both men is all transplanted hairs). If you took BF’s hair transplants away, he would look like ZU’s before photo.

This is reality and that is why I appreciated this question when it came in yesterday. People with a Class 7 balding pattern will never have enough hair to replace what was lost (and if any doctor said he/she can give such a person a full head of hair, well, he/she clearly is must be GOD). The key to a good hair transplant is the artistic hand of the surgeon and good styling from the patient, no matter what balding pattern exists.

ZU (before on left, after in middle, after crown on right — more photos here):

 

BF (before on left, after in middle, after crown on right):

 

Hair Transplants in a Class 7 Blonde Patient (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

This is a patient who was transplanted in two sessions totaling 4500 grafts over a decade ago. He stopped by my office to say hello and show off his great results so many years later. His before pictures (I apologize for the quality, as they were before we used digital cameras) are shown as well as the pictures taken today. Essentially, all of the original hair is now gone (Propecia was not available at the time he had his original surgery) and 100% of the coverage you are seeing in the recent photos are the results of his hair transplant. The only hair that exists now apart from the transplants is the 3 inch high ridge of hair around the side and back of his head. In many ways, this is a worst case scenario because his donor supply was limited but even with that, he has coverage for the front (going back about 4-5 inches) and his hair naturally parts down the middle. He is active in life, surfing regularly.

He is 57 years old and he now has the look of a 35 year old from the front. He told me that this was the best thing he ever did, that is, before he got married to his beautiful wife 18 months ago. Note that the crown bald area is wider than it was 10 years ago, but because of his comb-back, the view from the front (the fellow he sees in the mirror every day) is a hairy fellow.

Click the photos to enlarge.

Before:

 

After (a decade later):

 

More Important to Your Doctor – Patient’s Welfare or Patient’s Money? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

This is a follow-up of the blog entry from the other day, What Happens When a Doctor’s Car and Mansion Payment Is More Important Than You?

First, lets get to the photos. The photo on the left was taken this week in my office. The photo on the right was taken 18 months ago, also in my office (forgive the quality — it is scanned from a Polaroid). Click the photos to enlarge.

 

The above photos are of a man in his mid-50s. Note that the progression of his hair loss has been very significant. Some of the medications he uses may be promoting hair loss rather than saving his hair. He tried Propecia (finasteride), but he had wiped out his sexual drive from it. He went to another doctor for a second opinion and then came to see me with that second opinion. He was a good note taker and is fastidious about medical records. His father had prostate cancer. The doctor who offered him the second opinion suggested that he have 3000 graft placed all over this head. He would then have a “full head of hair”. Even though he saw a doctor, it was the salesman inside the doctor who was talking. That has to be the worst recommendation he can get, because shock hair loss is almost a certainty and this patient would be like the fellow I showed you the other day. To make matters worse, his donor supply was low so that the probability of getting 3000 grafts would have failed.

This patient did the right thing — he got a second opinion. In this case, he checked up on me. Transplanting the corners and making a hairline is an option, but he should stay away from transplanting into the thinning area. Because of the steroids he is taking, I advised him to stop some of the medications and try to take a smaller dose of Propecia, for if he undergoes a hair transplant (or even if he does not) and would want to see his hair loss stop first. Propecia may be the only good option for him and worth a try again at half of the dose. With the family history of prostate problems, Propecia is a good medication to reduce this risk. The other doctor only talked about selling him 3000 grafts and the benefits of such a procedure for him. Why am I alarmed? Simply, this man is losing hair in ‘gangbusters’ and as he is in his mid-50s — that is not supposed to happen. He is clearly an exception to the rule that men over 50 don’t usually go through accelerated balding. With low densities, any doctor who put hair into his crown will deplete his donor supply. He is also losing frontal hair now, so what is the Master Plan when he runs out of donor supply and money?

I showed him photos of his hair, and explained how the miniaturization of the hair was throughout the top and crown and if this area was transplanted, the hair he would lose would be more than any benefits he would have if he was transplanted. I am personally appalled at the desire of a doctor to try to push him into getting thousands of grafts and to make matters worse, he was never told that he may accelerate his crown loss with a transplant. Patients have every right to know such potential side effects and the probability of that happening. Doctors are legally obliged to inform patients of such risks. My only place to vent this frustration is on this site. I don’t mean to scare you and I don’t want you to think that every doctor out there is trying to screw you. There are many good and honorable doctors that do hair transplants, but again and again, I tell patients, Let the Buyer Beware.

What Happens When a Doctor’s Car and Mansion Payment Is More Important Than You? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Here is a man who had hair transplant surgery some years ago. He had hair then and the doctor put in about 600 grafts throughout his thinning area. After the surgery, his hair loss accelerated and when the grafts grew out, other than seeing some small plugs, he did not find any value to having had the surgery in the first place. Since his surgery, he lost all of the hair on the top and crown of his head. Now all he has left is the transplanted grafts that are now unnaturally scattered over his head. The doctor who did this was either ignorant or immoral. A properly done hair transplant should stand on its own, or the doctor should tell you otherwise. That is what is required of the doctor by law. There was NEVER a possibility that this patient had anything of value and now he has negative value that he will carry around for the rest of his life unless someone completes his hair transplant in a logical way. Even with a properly done job, he will not have enough hair to cover his crown. Still, the man he sees every day in the mirror should be much more normal looking after his ‘fix’. Unfortunately, too many doctors are quoting small and large transplant sessions where and when they are NOT NEEDED. These doctors are just out for the almighty dollar. Immorality has not been wiped out and the crooks are still out there. Don’t be fooled by slick ads and particularly watch out for doctors that use salesmen to push, push, push you into making a decision. Again I say, “Let the Buyer Beware“.

Click the photos to enlarge.

 

1 Year Post-Op Photo of FUE Donor Area? – Balding Blog

doctor, can you please post a 1 year post op picture of the donor site of a patient whose undergone FOX/FUE ? how much density is left in the area i have seen the pictures of immediately after the surgery but it would be nice to see how much of hair actually fills up the donor site after such a procedure is performed! thanks and keep up the good work!

Below, please see the close-up photo of a patient who had 1108 FUE grafts done slightly over a year ago. There is a variability of scarring in any patient, some people just heal better than others. This particular patient had a good density to start with, so the missing follicular units are less evident than one might see in a person with a lower density. Also, the hypopigmentation (white spots from punctate scar formation) which is seen in some patients is not present in this patient. I hope that this helps.

Update: I added some red arrows to just a few of the spots where grafts were extracted. Can you find the other spots? There are easily another 100 places where the follicular units were removed in this field of view.

FUE

 

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Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

I Want My Hairline Lowered an Inch – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

(female)
I’m 16 years old born with a high hairline just about 3 inches. I’ve saved about $5,000 to get the procedure to lower my hairline and was wondering about how much would it be to take off half an inch to an inch. i have a widows peak and wonder if you can fix that too. what would be an estimate and could there be any payment plans. i’d love to have this procedure done before i turn 21.

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The fee for a hairline lowering procedure is $8,000 (icludes all anesthesia and facility charges). The hairline lowering procedure is like a reverse brow lift and this is often the way women get a lower hairline. The widow’s peak would have to be assessed separately.

Alternatively, hair transplants could lower the hairline as well. This is, of course, what we do regularly with men and the fees are based upon how much hair is moved (price per graft). I would be happy to review your case confidentially if you send in a picture. Please reference this post if sending.

For more about hairline lowering, see Dr. Kabaker

Hair Loss InformationTemple Hair Transplanted in the Wrong Direction (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

This man came to see me after he had a hair transplant with an unbalanced hairline. His temples were also transplanted with the hair placed perpendicular to the normal direction. I recommended that we extract these hairs using FUE and then transplant them in the correct direction. I just wanted to show how important it is for the doctor you choose to actually have an understanding of the direction hair naturally grows in, so that you can have the most natural looking results possible. Click the photos to enlarge.

 

Transplanting the Frontal Corner, 6 Months Post-Op (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

See the dramatic change in just one session to the right frontal hairline of this celebrity (nameless of course). His hair is brown and medium fine thickness with dense packing of the grafts just behind the hairline. Please note that the hairline is not an actual line, and there is a transition zone that takes you from forehead to the thicker hair so that this does not look like a transplanted hairline. That is where the ‘art’ comes into play. When looking at the densitometer (magnified view of the scalp hair), I can see that there is still new hair just starting to grow from the scalp so that in another 2 months or so, he should show even greater fullness than he shows here. I placed about 500 follicular units in this corner.

The photo on the left is before, the two photos on the right is after 6 months. Click the photos to enlarge.