Hair Loss InformationHair Transplant Surgery Risks – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

I am considering a hair transplant procedure, but I am nervous about doing the surgery. What kinds of things can go wrong?

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Hair transplantation is indeed a surgical procedure, and there are risks associated with any type of surgical procedure. The degree of risk, however, is more tied to the type of anesthesia than the surgery itself. With the anesthesia being limited to local and sedation, rather than a general anesthesia, the risk is about the same as a visit to the dentist’s office, statistically a risk of death estimated at less that one in a million people.

Any time one has surgery there is the risk of something rare and serious happening, such as an allergic reaction to medication, or a blood clot to the lung, or even cardiac arrest. The best surgical facilities in the United States are certified for surgery by one of two independent agencies. Our facility is the only hair facility in the United States that is certified by one of these two agencies, ours is certified by the Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care.

The thing that you have to remember is that hair transplantation does not penetrate any body cavities. It is really analogous to taking off a big mole or wart. In 15 years and doing over 10,000 procedures, I have never seen any of the previously mentioned serious things happen. For a hair transplant the surgical risks can be defined well enough. The types of risks that should concern you include: infections, bleeding, swelling, wide scarring of the donor area, nerve damage and poor hair growth. I have never seen any serious infections as the scalp has a wonderful blood supply which prevents and protects against these infections. It is very common to have a few ingrown hairs with localized infections in the first few months as the new hairs grow in, but this is cared for by just keeping the scalp clean. Sometimes ‘popping’ these pimples yourself works, and when we do it we call it ‘draining’ the cyst. Sometimes these ingrown hairs produce a wider infectious problem which might require an antibiotic. Significant bleeding at the time of surgery should not occur in the hands of a competent surgeon, there may be some small drops of blood the first night after surgery but it is almost always handled with a little pressure directly to the bleeding area. If that doesn’t stop it, a suture might be needed, but that is exceedingly rare. Swelling after surgery is common. The swelling may work its way down to the eyes three or four days after the surgery, but the use of post-operative steroids may be helpful at reducing or eliminating swelling. Swelling always goes away after a few days.

Scarring always happens when the skin is cut, but newer techniques of wound closure usually prevent that from occurring at socially detectable levels. The more procedures one has, and the more grafts that are done with each successive procedure may make for a slightly wider scar. Rarely do these scars become cosmetically significant unless one shaved his head and in that case, all such scars will be seen no matter how perfect the healing is. Nerve damage should not occur, provided that you are using a well trained and competent surgeon. Poor hair growth is also something almost never seen, but occasionally happens. If your doctor and his assistants are experienced, and the techniques they use are modern state-of-the-art methods, only rarely is growth a problem.

Your question is important, for we often forget that everything in life has risks. Driving may be more risky than having a hair transplant surgery.

Hair Loss InformationWhat to Look For In a Doctor? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

What should I look for in a doctor that does hair transplants?

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In real estate, the most important thing is location, location, location. In hair transplant doctors, the most important thing is experience, experience, experience. You should look for someone who has years of experience in performing surgical procedures, such as a general surgeon, a plastic surgeon, or a dermatologist who does surgery. On top of that, you would want someone with years of experience doing hair transplants, and preferably someone who does that exclusively. You would also want to know what type of technique he/she uses, and only go with someone who does state of the art follicular unit transplants. You would want to know about the medical assistants that work with the doctor, since they are critical to the operative results. Hair transplantation is such a labor intensive operation that no doctor can do it alone; he or she needs help, and the assistants must be as good in their part of the operation as the doctor is in his/her part. The other thing that is important is that you see doctors’ work, preferably at a open house situation where you can actually see surgery being performed and see actual patients that they have operated on, and look at the result in person, not just in pictures. You need to spend time with the doctor, have your questions answered fully and with candor. You must have full confidence in him or her, and be assured that they are not just someone who wants to sell you something.

Hair Loss InformationComparative Shopping for Hair Restoration – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Why can’t you just buy on price? All that a hair transplant surgeon does is puts hair follicles into holes, so what’s the big deal?

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Great question and an important one as well. We are all sensitive to price and there is no doubt that if you can buy the ‘car’ cheaper from one dealer, why pay the higher price from another dealer. The higher price dealers try to sell service, but the reality is that a Lexus is a Lexus and you can get maintenance from any authorized dealer so you could buy the car over the internet and save thousands of dollars. A better question to ask: Why is a hair transplant (or any cosmetic procedure) different from buying a Lexus at the lowest price you can get?

I think that you now might understand where I am going with this question. How does one value cosmetic surgery services by particular doctors in a comparative shopping viewpoint? When you are buying the services of a surgeon for cosmetic surgery, you are buying:

  1. Unique surgical training
  2. Artistic judgments, experience and talents
  3. facilities and skilled staff

In a major cosmetic procedure (like a face lift for example), it often takes years to get the experience ‘under your belt’ to make a great cosmetic surgeon. Doctors just starting off are taking their skills from training and finely honing them, often ‘practicing’ the techniques that they accumulated in training. For a hair transplant surgeon, the same is true. I see hairlines that are not quite right, that are not well placed, that are not balanced, not distributed properly or placed in the proper alignment and/or are not delicate or subtle. So putting hairs into holes without skills and artistic judgments may give you an Edsel rather than a Lexus and everyone (unfortunately) knows what an Edsel looks like.

In a hair transplant, there are issues of ethics and judgments on the extent of surgery, the indications when to do it and when not to do it, how much to do, how often to do it, what is the particular variables of each patient when it comes to planning, and what risks should be taken for what gain, etc… Doctors who cut corners in recruiting patients have to employ people who sell for them and substitute their expensive time to the more cost effective time of a salesmen. As long as you have the money, a salesman will tell you that you need the surgery in order to take your money. In my practice, I turn down more work than I perform because I know when to do surgery and do not value the almighty dollar over what is best for my patient. This is not a plug for me, but a statement that a doctor’s value is in his knowledge and honesty in placing his patient’s interests above his financial interests.

In modern hair transplant surgery, the team is as important as the surgeon. Experienced team members are critical to producing a successful hair transplant. Novice doctors get hair transplant failures on a significant scale, but unfortunately, the consumer only learns of these failures 6-8 months after the surgery was done because it takes that amount of time for the hair to grow no matter who does the surgery. By the time a patient may find out that the transplant was a failure, his check has cleared the doctor’s bank and the doctor may not be in business anymore.

Take a look at newhair.com, read our history, our publications, and request a free copy of the book we wrote on transplantation. Look at the pictures of our patients and their results (over 200 on our site). We have written the authoritative articles for the repair of hair transplant problems. Be sure to thoroughly check out your doctor. With our medical group, you can meet a dozen or more patients at our monthly open house events and judge for yourself the value of what your dollar buys. There is no need to overpay, just to get real value and that is the power you, as a consumer, hold.

Hair Loss InformationHair Transplant Doctor Training – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

What type of training does a hair transplant doctor need?

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This is a difficult question to answer properly, so as I have lots of room and time to consider the question thoroughly, I will answer it in great detail. Read as much as you wish.

The Hair Restoration industry has a society called the ISHRS (International Society of Hair Restoration Surgeons) and they are trying to provide both the public and the doctors who ‘specialize’ in hair restoration a way to define this, both for those who call themselves specialists and those doctors who want to enter the field and learn how to become a hair restoration surgeon. As you may notice the way I started answering this question, I have divided the answer into two categories: The existing doctors who call themselves specialists (like myself) and the new doctors wanting to get into the field.

Existing Restoration Doctors: The existing group of hair restoration surgeons come from a wide diversity of specialties. Dermatology was the field that produced the original hair transplant process in the late 1950s, so this specialty has officially hosted the field ever since. The text books are largely written by Dermatologists and the leading medical journals in Dermatology have articles about advancements in the field with great frequency. In fact, most of the articles written by New Hair Institute doctors have been published in Dermatologic medical publications.

Now with that said, my training in hair restoration can be used as an example of one way into the field. I made a decision to get into the field in 1990 and visited doctors around North America after having read the two standard textbooks in the field. Once I decided to actually start a practice, I partnered with a doctor who had done thousands of these procedures and trained as a ‘preceptor’ with him for a period of 6 months. I personally felt capable of independence at that point, and continued working with him for a while, eventually spinning out a separate hair restoration practice. But training through a preceptor was nothing like my training as a surgeon (my actual credentials are as a general surgeon) where I spent 5 years working under the tutelage of many doctors in a formal training program where peer review was a daily process of supervision and training. In my surgical training, I also was rotated through a large number of related specialties which taught me much about how the body worked, how to perform surgery under many conditions, how to manage the very sick patient and how to manage patients with a wide variety of problems in the field. In effect, I was tested every day for 5 years and at the end of the process, I took a series of examinations that provided me credentials that are formerly recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties. The fields of dermatology, internal medicine and emergency medicine (where most of my colleagues come from) also have a certified training program with a similar grueling and intensive disciplined process that they had to go through to obtain their credentials. The ISHRS has endorsed a specializing board for this field. This requires taking an examination and amassing some patient experience. The American Board of Hair Restoration Surgeons is not however, recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties and to get to take the examination does not require a supervised training program of specified duration with constant monitoring of the progress of the training or the quality of the training. Most important, this ‘board’ does not supervise the training of a doctor to establish that this doctor has really met the standard of the industry. To a large degree, this problem reflects an absence of an industry standard as much as an agreement by industry ‘experts’ on what constitutes an industry standard. As such, I have personally not participated in the hair restoration ‘Board’ because of the general lack of standards in both the training and the quality of the doctors who call themselves Board Certified by this unofficial board. Despite this, many of the doctors who have obtained their certification from this board are good doctors trying their best to be the best. By taking this examination process they did show, at the least, that they are willing to be tested by their peers.

Doctors who want to become hair restoration surgeons have an enormous problem today. There are less then a half dozen 1 year fellowships with existing hair transplant surgeons. These one year fellowships are probably the best way to learn the field. Unfortunately, few medical practices see enough patients for a physician to accumulate enough experience. Worse still is the fact that the training programs do not build the type of proficiency in the manual skills of cutting and placing grafts. These two manual skills must be learned to be able to command every part of the hair transplant surgery. Too many doctors who do this surgery today are unskilled in cutting the grafts under the microscope or in placing very small grafts into a very small wound. These last two functions are supplied by medical assistants who work with the doctor as part of the surgical team. These technicians have no formal training program or certification process and they take years to train to levels of competence that make the surgical team proficient. Mastering these skills can not be done in a one year fellowship for the surgeon just because he will not have the actual time to master these graft cutting and placing skills. Also, managing the team for quality is what the surgeon must be able to do, because the follicular unit transplants themselves are not resilient and as such, are easily killed off. They are very vulnerable to dying or mismanagement from breakdowns in quality control procedures at the technician level. So the doctor training problem (because of the team nature of today’s modern hair transplant surgery) may be an insolvable problem. A new eager doctor must get training for himself and training for a team of people he puts together. Without patients of his own to practice on (coming through his office door in substantial quantities), he can not get the experience he needs to become good at it, or if he was good at it when he started, maintaining it would be the challenge. What is generally done by the novice start-up doctor, is that they hire itinerant surgical technicians who picked up their training elsewhere and bring someone elses experience to the surgery. The problem that this creates is that the technicians impose their quality and their training onto the doctor’s team. The team is only as good as its weakest person.

I can tell you of a couple of stories about doctors who went into the business recently. They are the ones I hear about, so they may be the bad stories. I suspect that I do not get the good stories through my network in this industry. I’m not naming names, so we’ll just call them Dr. X, Y, and Z.

Dr. X: Dr. X called Dr. Experience and asked if he could visit his office to watch a surgery. He came for a couple of hours. The next week, Dr. X had an Ad running in the newspapers announcing the opening of the practice. In the first day of surgery, Dr. X experienced uncontrolled bleeding. He called Dr. Experience for advice. In my Jewish culture, we call that type of bravado “Chutzpa” and it reflects badly on the doctor’s moral character as he is willing to experiment on unsuspecting patients without giving that patient ‘informed consent’.

Dr. Y: Dr. Y started his practice by doing the older type of plugs. In this way he kept his expenses down and the size of the surgery manageable. I met the unfortunate patient 6 months later, who much to my surprise, had the quality of work that was abandoned over a decade ago. The end result was an angry patient who was deformed by the procedure. I do not know what happened to the doctor, but when I called he was not doing hair transplants any longer.

Dr. Z: Observed me in my office irregularly over months. A few months into his own practice, he did one of his first hair transplants without adequate staff or skills. Unfortunately, he took out a strip of skin from the back of the head that he could not sew together. The result of this procedure was loss of the blood supply to an area of scalp 9 by 3 inches in size. A black, necrotic area developed and a wide scar (nine by three inches) resulted. I understand that a malpractice action was filed against Dr. Z.

Responsibility That Comes with Being a Hair Transplant Surgeon: One of the highest priorities for this industry is to identify some type of training modules or experiences for doctor. In this way, a good doctor can start building a resume that has a good credentialing program association. When people want to do this type of surgery, they should be able to sign up for and complete an introductory course that will bring some of the nuances for this type of career to the forefront. Then, a mechanism must be created to deal with the education, experience and hands-on training they must get. The problem is that there is no general agreement on what it takes to train a doctor short of the old preceptor approach. I have trained many doctors through preceptorships, some of whom (I am sorry to say) will never make good hair transplant doctors. We have also held a series a courses approved by the American Association of Dermatology where over 100 physicians have taken didactic and surgical training with us. These courses were comprehensive and extensive, but the 22 credit hour course would not prepare any doctor to do this surgery. This hair restoration industry has unfortunately had a long history of producing ugly and at time deforming work. These procedures were inflicted on tens of thousands of people over the past 40 years. It was the Standard of Care for far too long. Although this type of work is less common today, the new doctors entering the field could become as much a victim of their exuberance to enter the field as the patients they may ‘practice’ upon.