Response from Propecia in 49 Year Old Man (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am often asked if Propecia can really make a difference. I want to state that I am not a salesman for Merck. I own no stock in the company and my only focus here is to educate the readership and share the things I see in my very large hair practice in the hope that I can help people.

Here is an unusual response from Propecia in a 49 year old man who had been on Propecia for just 3 months. The hair in the frontal area filled in very nicely and will probably fill in further. If the drug works, most of the results are usually seen in the first 8-9 months when the hair has had the opportunity to grow some length and pass through a hair cycle. In most cases, some continued growth can be seen as far out as 2 years into the treatment process. What makes this unusual is the patient’s age. When I see such results, they are more often in young men in their 20s, but periodically I see them in men 40-70 years old as well, just less common.

I suggest that those readers that find this of interest to zoom into the photos and actually look at the hairs to estimate hair counts on their own. The darkness of the picture on the right is a photographic problem and I apologize for it. I am trying to get this patient back to get better photographs and a more advanced view of his growth over more time.

Before photo is on the left — after photo is on the right. Click to enlarge.

Extreme Makeover Patient Heather Update (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

This is the end result after hair transplants on Heather, our only female patient from the Extreme Makeover television show. She is thrilled with the results and tells us that it has changed her life. It took two procedures (totaling 2832 grafts) to get her where she is today because her donor hair was so poor, but with her persistence, she made it all work out. Click the photos below to enlarge.

After:

Before:

What Does a Hair Transplant Donor Scar Look Like? (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

How the donor area exactly look after HT ? I have no idea…does it look very ugly and scary ? My doc is not exploring it completely….plz help me sir.

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If your doctor does not answer this question for you by showing you patients so that you can examine the donor scar yourself, then go to another doctor who will do this for you. You should be frightened if you are not getting good answers.

Take a look at the two sets of photos below. These patients (who both had Follicular Unit Transplantation) consecutively came into the office for a routine follow-up visit. All scars were easily covered by the combed hair and to see the scar, a comb had to lift up the hair. Click the photos to see full-size.

Patient 1:

 

Patient 2:

 

For further photos of donor scarring, see Trichophytic Closure Photos.

Forelocks and Widow’s Peaks (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am 21 years old and I think that I’m thinning. I have a prominent widow’s peak. My father (his white haired front view is shown here) and my grandfather both have balding (like the picture you showed of Dave Letterman on February 2nd, but the ‘pancake’ size area in the middle remains strong on both of them). I expect that I will keep my ‘pancake’ just like my father and my grandfather, but if I lost it, could it all be transplanted (including mywidow’s peak)? Can you tell me from my picture if I am losing my hair? I took a picture of it for you to see.

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A widow’s peak can be created with a hair transplant. Many people (including me) think that it is a sexy look for people with narrow faces, and it works in a transplant when the surgeon is artistic. Some people have a widow’s peak with the hair direction pointing to the side instead of pointing front. This ‘cow lick’ in a widow’s peak is a bit more difficult to reproduce, but it can be done if the widow’s peak is eroding even with a ‘lick’. For an example of what I mean, see the photo below — click to enlarge.

 

The unusually good picture sent by this man (below) shows thinning behind the forelock and I took the liberty to create a zoomed version of the photo to show the difference in densities under magnification (click to enlarge).

 
His father’s hairline shows that the forelock is strong and I suspect the widow’s peak is a family trait (see photo below — click to enlarge).

 
Referring back to the son’s photo, I think that you can see this young man has reduced density and miniaturization when comparing the central part of the scalp (just behind his forelock) to the forelock. It looks like this young man will bald behind his forelock, possibly more balding than I think that his father shows now, but the strong forelock and widow’s peak may hold even if the hair around it falls out.

Horror Story with a… Happy Ending? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Here’s a story about a dermatologist who had a hair transplant when he was 25 years old, in 1975. Forgive the blurriness of the photo below.

What is particularly important about this first picture is the amount of hair that he actually had when the transplant process was started. He was clearly thinning his hair in the Norwood Class 6 balding pattern and if he were treated today, he would have been put on finasteride (Propecia) to halt the hair loss and hopefully lock in the Norwood Class 6 pattern. When he had the plugs put in, the hair was still there, although clearly heavily miniaturized. The photo above was taken in the first month after the surgery and the hideous looking islands reflected grafts that contained between 20-30 hairs and crusting after the surgery. The crusts which are shown here are only a few weeks old, but in those days, the patients were deformed for months after the surgery as the healing progressed very slowly. The only good news for this man was that many of the hairs failed to grow, reducing the pluggy appearance, simply because of the failure of hairs to grow. His first procedure put two lines of plugs in the frontal hairline, which were followed up with many more plugs at another surgical session.

Norwood Class 6He eventually lost all of his hair native in the Norwood Class 6 pattern. The grafts were taken out of his donor area with hollow drills measuring slightly under 1/4 inch which left him with white spots about 1/4 inch round that could easily be seen through the thinned out donor area. After he completed his surgery, he developed a comb-over to hide the plugs, but the hairline was still deforming and even with a comb-forward style, he could not hide the hideous grafts.

In 1988, he went to Denver and had a few hundred micrografts placed in front of the hairline by the inventor of the micrograft. The focus was to put camouflage in front of the plugs. This surgery did much to soften his look. Still, on meeting people in his dermatology practice, eyes focused on his hairline and the top of his head. That convinced him that he needed to find a better solution. Eventually, he had grafts removed, received dermabrasion to smooth out the bumps and cobblestoning, and had about 8 laser hair removal procedures to kill off the hair that he worked so hard to put there. To deal with the deformities created by the harvesting techniques, he had finely stippled tattoos created to look like hair and this hides most of the scars on the side and back of his head. His final look, one of a bald man, seems to work for him. His approach to his problem was creative and it showed me the value of the old saying: “Necessity is the mother of invention”. This doctor, armed with a unique set of skills (dermatologist) and facing his deformities every day in the mirror, applied his talents to solve his problem. He got there and now people who see him as a doctor, look straight into his eyes, not at his head. Congratulations!

Note: Most people see someone just like this man walking down the street, at a movie, in a restaurant, or at an airport. There is a perception that this pluggy look is the look of a hair transplant, but this type of procedure, if done today, would be clear malpractice and not acceptable in this litigious legal climate. Unfortunately, tens of thousands of men had this awful surgery done worldwide years ago. The victims were many — far too many. Personally, I can not imagine why a doctor would ever perform such a surgery. Fortunately, there are many ways to treat this problem and becoming bald is just one option (see Repair – Dean’s Story for an example of using hair transplantation to correct the old plugs).

For even more information on repair, please see:

Hair Loss InformationAlopecia Areata in a Patient with a Miracle Cure (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

One of my patients came in yesterday to show me the results of my referral and his treatment for alopecia areata. I have included his before pictures and his after pictures below. One treatment reference is included here — Alopecia areata: successful half-side treatment with DNCB.

The treatment on this patient was managed by Clinical Professor of Medicine/Dermatology at UCLA School of Medicine, Dr. Richard Strick, a real expert on the treatment of this disease. Most doctors should not attempt this treatment, as it requires extensive experience with the drug and its dangerous side effects.

Please click the photos to enlarge.

Before:

 

After:

The after photos show only three small balding areas remaining — one on the back and one on the side of the scalp both about 1/2 inch or less in diameter, and one in the middle of his frontal hairline.

The Transplanted Widow’s Peak (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

If I have a hair transplant, I want to know if you can put back the Widow’s Peak that I had as a kid?

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Yes. See the photos of Extreme Makeover patient Marque below. The photo to the lower right shows a frontal hairline restoration with a widow’s peak, just as you asked. The photo at the left is before 2 procedures totaling 3455 grafts. When I create a widow’s peak, I generally do not like to make it ‘regular & tight’ and prefer to have some patchy elements to it, for it makes it look non-man made. Please click to enlarge.

Covering Up a Hair Transplant Days After Surgery (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

This patient has black hair and white skin, so his short ‘beard’ shows at the hairline where he was transplanted just 3 days before these photos were taken (see photo to the left, below). He just combed his hair forward and to the side (as shown in the photo to the lower right) to camouflage his hair transplant. People who do not wash their transplants correctly, may scab more than those who do wash properly. When a patient has hair to use for cover, creativity in styling goes a long way to cover up transplants. Two days after this picture was taken, all of the ‘scabs’ shown in the below photos were gone. Please click to enlarge.

Hair Loss InformationTransplanting Asian Hair (with Photos) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am Asian. I lost all of the hair in the front. I understand that black hair and white skin (my situation) is more difficult to get good results. True or false?

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True. Asian hair, which is often straight and black, is contrasted with a light skin color making the hair transplant less forgiving if it is done improperly. So while it is more difficult to get great results, it is not impossible. We have transplanted hair for many Asian patients over the years.

Here’s an example of one Vietnamese patient that has a Norwood class 6 pattern of hair loss. The photo on the left is before hair transplantation, the photo on the right is after 1 procedure of 1,852 grafts. Please click to enlarge.



I Have Very Patchy Facial Hair (with Photo) – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I’ve got some horrific facial hair coverage. From the jawline up it’s just atrocious, very thin coverage of hair, and it’s very patchy. however from the jawline down, I’ve always thought I had really nice thick coverage. Not that I’m really thrilled about it, I’m not too fond of the “amish beard” look. Is there any way to fix patchyness in facial hair? And what would cause this to happen? I didn’t have any injuries to this area as a child (no scarring or burns or anything that i remember that might prevent hair from growing there). I have attached a photo which you may use on your site. I’m 25 years old. Thanks

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Some people have uneven facial hair distribution and others are delayed in their beard growth, which may develop well into their 30s with more uniformity. You should wait and see what grows out as your beard matures.

Alternatively, you may consider transplanting hair from your head to the beard area, assuming the caliber of the hair is similar (it must be close to the same texture). If it is not, then you might have two types of hair which may be obvious and another type of problem. Even though beard to beard transplants would work, I would not recommend this approach, because it would thin out the beard you have in other areas (where you are happy with it) — unless you take the hair from below the chin where it is not easy to see. This may be a bit extreme and costly, but it would work beautifully. Although the transplantation may be an option, I actually think that this may be overkill and would ask you to wait until you fully grow out your beard. If it continues into your 30s and you still want to do it, then go for it. I will take you on as a patient.

Here’s the photo that the email included (with permission to post it here):