Hair Transplant Without Scars? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I read a doctor’s web-site and he said his hair transplants did not produce scars in the donor area. Is that possible?

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The FUE technique is often called a “scar-less” surgery, but that is misleading. Instead of the linear scar with conventional strip harvesting, FUE produces punctate scarring (pin-point scars about 1mm or less in size). If a doctor would state either in an advertisement or on his/her website that they perform scar-less surgery, any doctor that did this in California, for example, would violate truth in advertising rules and could be disciplined for use of such language by the Medical Board of California. Every time the skin is cut, no matter how small the cut it, it will produce a scar. FUE scars can be seen easily when the scalp is shaved or clipped closely and doctors use many ‘punch’ sizes which will impact the size of these punctate scars.

Hair Loss InformationHair Transplants and Scar Tissue – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I have some questions about hair transplant in skin with extensive scarring. I’ve tried looking for information on this online, but the vast majority of the information available is on transplantation into normal skin, and any information on scarring is generally limited to scarring as a result of the procedure itself. This seemed like a good place to ask.

A friend of mine was in a fire about 11 years ago and has had extensive skin grafts and reconstructive surgery. One of these procedures was an attempt to stretch the areas of his scalp that still grew hair to cover the areas that did not. However, the skin proved to be too thin to completely cover the hairless areas, and he was left with 2 areas of scalp with no or very sparse hair, each about 2″x3″. While he is comfortable with the grafts on his body, I know the hairless patches on his head really bother him. He has jokingly mentioned getting hair plugs in the past, but he doesn’t think his hair is thick enough to provide donor sites, and I think he worries that transplanting into thin or scarred skin would be impossible.

So, basically, my questions are, can living hair be transplanted into large areas of scar tissue? Can hair follicles be harvested without causing other noticeable thin spots, or can it be donated from another person with similarly textured and colored hair?

Thank you!

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Yes, hair can be implanted into scar tissue to provide a cosmetic benefit. We have done that on many occasions, but the status of the skin is critical in making the determination to go forward. Skin grafts, for example, with no thickness to them may not be able to tolerate hair grafts. Your friend’s issues are not unique and there are patients who have had hair transplant surgery to cover the bald areas from such tragedy. We have done many with neurosurgery scars and face lifts scars that easily support hair grafting, but each and every patient is very unique and can pose challenges.

I really cannot answer your question without seeing the patient in person or at least seeing a photograph. If your friend is considering options, I would have them make an appointment with a good hair transplant surgeon to discuss those options. (Also, “hair plugs” is a term used for the outdated procedures done in decades past. Current techniques can create an undetectable result without a pluggy look.)

Hair Loss InformationCan I Get a Trichophytic Closure After My 2nd Hair Transplant? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am considering my second hair transplant as I have developed some baldness since the first procedure. My question is, can the old donor scar be made into a tricophytic scar during the second procedure?

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Yes, the trichophytic closure can be done on the second or even third procedure to try to make the scar smaller. I haven’t written much about the trichophytic closure in recent months, but essentially it is a technique to minimize donor area scarring for those that have a hair transplant using the strip method. You can find photos here and here.

Hair Loss InformationSelective Removal of Cobblestoned Grafts via FUE – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

This is in response to My Hair Transplant Made My Skin Cobblestoned!

So, Selective removal of the grafts via FUE is not an option to reduce the cobble stoning? I too have this issue, and I only Have a few hundred grafts, not all of them are cobble stoning, maybe a total of 200 are cobblestone. I know FUE leaves a small scar, but would the removal of 2-300 grafts over my entire scalp really be that noticeable? Why do you say more hair transplantation is the only option?

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Follicular unit extraction (FUE) is done with very small punches where a follicular unit is removed one at a time. Cobblestoning is a whitish scar with no hair in it. If you want these white scars punched out, then they will form new white scars, i.e. no gain. Removing the entire larger graft with the cobblestoned skin is the only real way to do this, and the scar that may be formed will probably be less detectable than the cobbled area. Depending upon the location of the cobblestoned area, camouflaging it with a hair transplant may be needed.

This is a very difficult question to answer without seeing just what you are concerned about. Please send me photos and I can be more pointed in my answer to you.

Hair Loss InformationI Want Scar Revision and Then FUE to Eliminate My Scar Completely – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hi,

First of all I want to thank you for this informative blog. I have searched this wonderful blog and have found numerous postings relating scars and hair transplant. Here’s my case: I have what “they” call a coronal scar that runs from ear to ear. What I want is to completely cover the scar through a FUE procedure, but I want my scalp to be like how it first was, normal. My research has been conclusive and I first want to have a scar revision surgery to reduce the width of the scar, once that is done i want to follow some type of scar treatment to make the scar less obvious in color (seems like the scar gets pink/red after a scar revision surgery). Afterward get the FUE procedure and go from there. Is there any treatments that you would suggest?

I want the scar to be inconspicuous to the point to be able to cut the hair in the military/short hair style, because ultimatley i want to join the military as an officer.

Best Regards

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Your plan is good, but it may not be realistic to have the scar completely hidden. Even if the hair in the scar is brought up to near normal density (which may take a few FUE procedures), there is often a color difference in the remaining scar, though of course it will be hidden with FUE grafts.

As you are local to my Los Angeles office, please arrange to see me so that I can ascertain a plan that matches yours. Any preparatory treatments can be assessed and recommended when you see me. You can call 800-NEW-HAIR (or 310-553-9113) to schedule a free consultation with myself or Dr Pak.

My 3 Year Old Has a Scar on Her Scalp with Hair Loss – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Sir,

I have read responses on your most helpful website. I hope you can help me.

My 3 year old daughter had a laceration to the back of her head 4 weeks ago. The cut was closed at hospital casualty with medical glue. The scar is about 4cm in length. The area around the scar is bald (say 2cm to 3cm either side).

Please could you advise if you think the hair will grow back on the area not scarred? I note with interest that you were in Vietnam. From what I have read the medical glues were first used there. Do you know if they led to such cases of baldness? If so, was it just short term? Also what can be done for hair restoration on the scar itself e.g. will hair grow back? Is it best left? can a transplant be done if necessary?.

This is really worrying me. Kind regards

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Some hairs should grow back, but there may be an area where hair will not regrow. Medical glue does not cause scarring, but the lacerations will.

Hair transplantation can be done if necessary, but you should wait at least one year to allow hair to regrow to see what happens. Having a hair transplant at 4 years old is generally not advisable for fixing the scar, so perhaps you should wait until your daughter is older until she has a maturity level to undergo such a procedure. The best age will be determined between you and her doctor. Most girls under 8 years old do not really focus on small scars.

Hair Loss Information100% Donor Scar Elimination? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman,

Do you think that 100% elimination of donor scars will be possible in the future? Technology is always improving and it seems like scars could be emliminated. Are there any other possibilities other than Juvista and Acell that are being researched? Thank you for all the helpful information.

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Scarring happens as a result of all surgeries. There is no such thing as 100% elimination of a scar and treatments like Juvista and Acell will not dispose of scars entirely. The key to dealing with scars is to keep them very, very small. In the case of a donor scar, it can be as small as 1mm wide naturally in good healers, or reduced to that level on occasion. For bad healers, there really is no solution. By “bad healers” I mean those people who stretch their scars after the wound has healed.

Techniques such as the trichophytic closure repair of a wound in the donor area works well in many, but not all patients. For more info on the trichophytic closure technique, see here and here.

Hair Loss InformationNotes from the ISHRS 2009 Conference, Part 2 – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

ISHRS 2009I just got back from the 17th annual scientific ISHRS meeting (basically a hair transplant doctor’s convention), which went on from July 22-26. Lots of information was presented… lots of lectures, presentations, and discussions. This year’s meeting was in Amsterdam, so I had quite a long flight back to California when it was all over and I was able to do a write up on the plane of what I learned. I thought I’d share…

If you missed yesterday’s post, check out part 1 of my ISHRS meeting notes! Here’s part 2…

 

Surgical

 

Hair transplant failures:
Hair transplant failures are often due to undiagnosed scarring (cicatricial) alopecias, so the need to detect them is critically important in advance of the procedure. The skin is often white and shiny and their activity may be in spurts, active at some times and inactive at other times. In my opinion and from my experience, women suffer more undiagnosed scarring alopecias than men and reflecting abnormal patterns of balding may be a clue to their presence. The doctor usually makes the diagnosis when these abnormal balding patterns appear and then the doctor will take multiple skin biopsies in the identified areas. Biopsies are the traditional approach, but the tissues that are taken for biopsy must have some active disease going on to affirm a diagnosis. When the biopsy approach to diagnosis is made, they are made with sizable tools (usually a series of 4 mm punches along the edge of the abnormal balding pattern). Alternatively, test transplants (which are limited procedures) can be done to see if growth occurs at 6-8 months. I have been performing test transplants over the years in such suspicious cases, as this is a more certain way of making the anticipation of success or failure of a traditional hair transplant. Failures of transplants in patients with such scarring alopecias are common.

Hairline design:
This is an area that I find most interesting. My philosophy is very different than most other doctors in the field. I tend to place hairlines in the mature position while most other doctors place the hairlines higher with more recession. There is a belief by many doctors that eventually a traditional mature hairline normally found in a non-balding man will not look normal as a man ages, so the hairline designs offered by many of my colleagues leave portions of the Norwood Class 3 and 4 frontal pattern into the end design of the hairline. Most men, however, want the man that they see in the mirror to reflect the mature hairline, not an “older” looking hairline, so I recommend the mature hairline almost all of the time. This is easily seen at our monthly open house events or online in our Hairline Photo Gallery. As my design of a hairline differs from many of the designs of my colleagues, the art form of a hair transplant surgeon will be evident to all.

Graft trimming:
Graft trimming by the surgeon and his team seems to reflect the robustness of the hair growth. A study was performed by Dr. Michael Beehner, where he trimmed the grafts from chunky to very skinny. The grafts that were made very skinny did not grow as well as those grafts that were made more chunky with more fat surrounding the hair grafts. Dr. Beehner believes that making grafts very skinny seems to:

  1. Open them up to the damage from drying and being out of the body for any prolonged period.
  2. Critical elements of the growth centers where stem cells exist, may be trimmed away during graft preparation.

New Hair Institute has always produced chubby grafts for these obvious reasons giving us a good growth track record. There is a direct relationships between the size of the graft and the ability to make recipient sites and place them well. The need to match the graft thickness with the recipient site holes are critical for good graft stability and growth.

FUE:
Four devices were shown to improve the FUE (follicular unit extraction) process. Each claimed that their product was the only one that worked. Every one had a mechanical rotation associated with it one with vibration, others with partial twists of varying diseases. Costs for these devices run as little as $60/each for a disposable device, to as high as possibly $200,000 for robotic controlled FUE soon to be available on the market. Clearly when there are so many options offered, the suggestion is that none really work well. Time will tell which are the best instruments by next year’s ISHRS meeting in Boston.

Saturday morning held a series of sessions called “Breakfast with the Experts”. My session on FUE seemed to have the highest audience. The concerns by the participants were the wild and unsubstantiated claims in performing high numbers of FUEs in a single procedure and a very unrealistic view of damage to the FUE graft from transaction and stripping the grafts in the process of extracting the grafts.

Wound closures:
Would closures from strip surgery were discussed in great detail by many doctors, each promoting their own prejudices. There was clearly no technique that was better than others to prevent scarring. Suggestions on trichophytic closures were one of the few bright spots, but the differences in the techniques used by the various doctors, in my opinion, ranged from effective to completely ineffective. In other words, getting a trichophytic closure is no guarantee of a great result from the technique and a trichophytic closure in one doctor’s hands may be a radically different technique than the same procedure in another doctor’s hands. Results ranged anywhere between wonderful and a complete failure.

Will Hair Grow Back After My Car Accident? – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

i was in a car crash 4 months ago and got a bleed to the brain that needed to be operated on..im just wondering seen as im only 18 wil hair ever grow back on the scar if not is there anyding else i could do?

Incisions from brain surgery often produce scars because they widen slightly (about 1/4 inch on many people). If they are located in the hair baring scalp, then these scars are easily treated with hair transplants, quite successfully. The hair will not grow back on its own in the scar.

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Experiencing Problems with Grafts Put Into a Scar – Hair Loss Information by Dr. William Rassman

Dear Dr Rassman,
I recently had about 420 grafts put into a scar that was about 10mm wide and 100mmlong. Some of the hairs that were implanted in there (this is from about 4 months ago) are still in there. They haven’t grown, and are just sitting there..they are bent as well, where the growth has stopped. What does this mean?

Also, I keep getting scabs in the scar tissue where the hair was implanted. Would this be because my body is trying to remove those hairs that have not shed(but not growing), and does hair that grows in scar tissue cause the scar to scab, when breaking through the scar? Also, I was told i’d have to wait 18-24 months before most of the growth. Do you agree with this?

thank you

First and foremost, I would go back to the doctor who performed your surgery for a recheck. He/she should be able to answer your questions more specifically as it relates to a procedure they were a part of and know more about your overall health.

On average, it takes 6 to 12 months for hair to grow. Hair growth in scar tissue tends to be slightly slower than in non-scarred tissue, and in general, it is thought that hairs transplanted into scars do not grow as well as hair transplanted to normal scalp/skin. There is no study to prove one way or the other if that is true, though. In a few cases where I transplanted a small number of grafts into a scar and counted them at full growth, 100% of what I put in grew.

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