Hair Loss InformationThe Truth About Cheap Hair Transplants – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Note: My answer to this question is very extensive and detailed, almost like a consumer guide for shoppers needing hair transplants. Please take your time in reading it and try to read between the lines, for there is much I did not say. The answer took me over a week to write, because the question was so pointed and so appropriate to what I am asked almost daily.

I am very confused about prices that are charged in your field and the associated estimates in what you guys want to do for me. I believe in capitalism so the wide range of prices does not bother me as much as the wide range of recommendations I get when I see a hair transplant doctor. This clearly impacts costs. My Norwood Classification is a Class 6. I have had recommendations as low as 1000 grafts in one or two sessions. That doctor told me that more than 1000 grafts in a single session could not be supported by the blood supply of the balding area. I have also been told by you earlier this year, that I could have as high as 4000 grafts in one or two separate sessions. No matter what the prices are, the difference between one session of 1000 grafts and two sessions of 4000 grafts is a huge cost differential. On one hand, I want to believe that 1000 grafts will work for me as it is easy to afford (the doctor charges $5/graft, or $5,000) but on the other hand, your estimate of between 4000-8000 grafts is so out of line with the lower estimate, I am a bit put off about having hair transplants at all. I have also seen other doctors and the wide range of estimates continue to amaze me. I want to be a good buyer so I want to compare apples and apples. Who should I believe?

Block Quote

Hair transplant costs are one thing and ethical practices by the physician are another. You must know what you are buying to value a hair transplant’s real cost to you. Add to that, the expectations you have and the probability of meeting them. Bottom line, a meeting of the mind between you and your doctor addressing your goals is what matters and only in the final results will you really know what you purchased.

In your particular case, the more of a perfectionist you are, the more hair you will want. If I projected 4000 to 8,000 grafts, I would have anticipated your desire for fullness is far greater than the average person. Then there is still another factor, your donor supply. If your donor density is high, then you can get more hair moved and more hair placed in the balding pattern you describe, but if it is not very high, then you will be hair limited and 4000 grafts might be out of the question for you. Some doctors will tell you exactly what they think you want to hear (rather than what is really best for you) – to make sure that you will proceed with the surgery.

Market Thresholds for Buying Cosmetic Surgery:
Most men will spend up to $5,000 for a cosmetic procedure without too much thought. Above this, cost will come into the decision making process and the higher above $5000, the more difficult will be that decision process. The question you need to think about is: Was the quote a lowball estimate, just enough to ‘get me into the surgical chair’ and make me think that $5,000 will give me what I need/want? A quote over $10,000.00 may turn away a potential patient, but I would rather do that then have you buy a hair transplant and then be disappointed in the decision you made. Disappointment here, unfortunately, means more work and more money than you were expecting. That happens far too often when the goal of the doctor is to make the deal, rather than to achieve your goals. So I always try to sound out the patient’s expectations and for some who I feel have very high expectation, if the donor supply can support the harvest, my recommendations may be higher than on the same balding pattern in a person with lower expectations. For a pricing point of view, we have a sliding scale for the larger sessions to make economies of scale work for both patient and doctor.

To repeat one more time, my policy has always been to try to understand the patient’s wants, his expectations and match these with his supply of donor hair, his degree of balding and, of course, his pocketbook. Estimating the number of hair grafts needed is both an art and a science. If you look at our photo album of more than 200 patients, you will see before and after pictures that not only show the results and outcomes from a hair transplant, but how many grafts the patient actually received. With over 200 patients in this album and thousands over the years, I have come to understand that Class 6 patients take far more than 1000 grafts to get any reasonable degree of fullness. In my experience, Class 6 patients generally take in excess of 5,000 grafts to get reasonable fullness, unless the hair is coarse. The reality is that, having a balding Class 6 pattern, you probably lost 50,000 hairs already. With an average of 2 hairs per graft, a 4000 graft case will only put back 8000 of the 50,000 hairs you lost (16% of the lost hair from the Class 6 pattern). What the doctor who quoted 1000 grafts is saying is that he believes that 2000 hairs (1000 grafts) or 4% of your original number of hairs will complete your process. A very far stretch indeed!

You could not have produced a more illustrative point by citing this huge difference between my recommendation and that of the doctor you used in your example. I will make certain assumptions from the clues you gave me to answer your question as to why my recommendations were so high. You said our clinic recommended 4000 grafts in one or two separate sessions, which means that:

  1. We have recommended as much as 8000 grafts (16,000 hairs)
  2. Your donor supply and donor densities are well above normal (we would rarely recommend high numbers like these without good densities and good scalp laxities)
  3. You have a lighter skin color and a dark hair color producing a higher contrast between your hair and skin color
  4. Your hair is finer than normal hair weight, which would require more grafts (more hair) for a Norwood Pattern Classification of 6 (a coarse hair could have 5 times the weight of a fine hair)
  5. You are a perfectionist with very high expectations

Now let’s look at the variables before us that relate to the philosophy of the physician’s practice, his team, and his expected results.

Just how good is the doctor’s staff? Are they efficient? Do the technicians prepare follicular units from the donor strip when dissecting the grafts? Are follicular units better than other grafts and does the doctor actually prepare them or say that they do? Preparing follicular units, which in my opinion is far superior than any other graft because it is just the way God put you together, is more than a term. It is more difficult to prepare grafts with a microscope and the process is meticulous and slower than non-microscopic dissection. Even with microscopes, you may not be getting follicular units, so how would you know this? If the doctor was not honest about what he was going to do, would you ever know?

The problem here is that the patient chooses the doctor thinking that they would adhere to a method that everyone agrees is a standard (like an ounce of gold). But alas, this naiveté points out that no such standard really exists. We have spent many years developing the NHI method of follicular unit transplantation, and are confident that it is the standard that should be followed. Our research has been published in the finest medical journals in the world (see Medical Publications), and it is readily available to physicians and patients to read. You must be sure that your doctor is not posing as a ‘fox guarding the hen house’ because you pay for honest or dishonesty, good or bad techniques, and you pay not only in money, but in successful or unsuccessful results that are with you for the rest of your life. I hope this is not frightening you, but like someone doing a face lift, experience, skills and integrity can not be compromised or the face might turn into an ugly mask. I am not pleased when I see deformed patients from either old hair transplant procedures (before the modern era when transplants were obvious but sold as undetectable) or bad modern work (which I unfortunately see far to often in my office today).

The Surgical Staff:
Proper training of staff is just the first part in assembling a world class team. Once a team member has the basic skills, the more experienced staff teams positively impact the quality of the procedure. Some of the ways are: (a) faster surgeries, (b) keeping the hair out of the body for shorter periods of time, (c) producing less trauma to the grafts in their handling and trimming process, and (d) reducing the overall length of the surgery with less anesthesia administered. This should translate into a higher graft survival rate, a very low infection risk, a safer surgery and great results with a predictable ‘naturalness’ and fullness that reflects your hair characteristics. Even with a highly experienced team that has a good clinical supervision, follow-up training, having a positive work atmosphere and excellent attitudes, the blend of a good doctor and an outstanding well organized team are required to ensure that the patient will have the best results.

The Grafts:
There are hair grafts called MUGs (multi-haired follicular groups), similar but not identical to what used to be called minigrafts. These grafts often contain 2-7 hairs each, made up of more than one follicular unit. When priced per hair, these grafts are clearly cost effective and very competitive to follicular unit transplantation (FUT), but they have a pluggy element in their appearance, particularly when looked at from close up. These MUGs and minigrafts are frequently sold as grafts, a term that each doctor may define differently. These larger grafts may be performed by doctors who lack the experienced teams of people to produce the more delicate grafts that consist of individual follicular units, or, the patient may want to achieve more fullness for the price and is willing to sacrifice some modicum of detection for it. Some doctors have done well with the larger grafts. The lower the costs per ‘graft’, the easier it is to sell the service and the more affordable the grafts seem to be. One doctor told me that he sells two classes of grafts, (1) those that are equivalent to the ‘first class ticket on an airline’, the true follicular unit transplants (FUTs), and (2) the equivalent to the coach seat on the airline (MUGs or minigrafts). Both airline tickets get you to where you want to go, but one is clearly ‘better’ in some respects to the other. I personally do not believe that doctors, who sell MUGs or minigrafts, think that these grafts are as good as traditionally pure FUTs and I think that they firmly believe that MUGs are good enough for most people. I may not agree with that approach, but that is strictly my opinion. But considering that the price is less per hair, doctors who sell these MUGs or minografts get an edge when selling hair in a competitive market and when the finest possible quality is not the most important consideration for the prudent, cash starved buyer who wants or needs more and more hair.

I have seen many patients with MUGs and minigrafts at the meetings, and for the darker haired individual with lighter skin, they do not compete in quality to follicular unit grafts and rarely do they meet my standards. However some people with gray, blonde, or African hair can look pretty good with MUGs and minigrafts. I have seen many patients who come to my office to complain about the pluggy appearance of MUGs or minigrafts, particularly in the obsessive-compulsive, detailed-oriented patient with high contrast hair and skin color. So, in this third example, we are talking about quality as a spin-off of the cost formulae in particular instances. The point (for the doctor) is that the patient needs to know what you are selling them. There is no substitute to really learning about what you are going to buy.

Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE) is another place you must be careful when considering a hair transplant based solely upon price. A graft removed by FUE has a risk of being damaged when it is extracted. That damage can come from: (a) grafts that have many transected hairs when they are taken out producing fewer hairs removed, (b) grafts that are buried inside and left behind which can cause infections and foreign body reactions, (c) grafts that lose the fat that surrounds the grafts making them vulnerable to fast drying or growth center damage which will impact graft survival and hair growth. At a meeting in the past year, a series of doctors demonstrated their skills in FUE and each had claimed expertise in the art, but alas, only one (I was told) had good hair yields. This is no surprise to me, no surprise at all. Some doctors claim expertise with limited (or no) experience. When I published the first paper ever published on this technique, a doctor who had built no significant presence in the field announced expertise within 60 days of my publication. I remember him well because he called me to ask me how to do the procedure and I gave him advice on some of the details he wanted to know. When I read about his self-declared expertise, I felt sorry for the patients who would fall into the ‘spider’s web’.

Microscopes:
The proper use of the microscope absolutely increases the number of grafts taken from any given donor area (see Dissecting Microscope versus Magnifying Loupes). By not using microscopes, doctors will waste valuable donor hair. Although this does not directly increase the cost of the procedure in dollars, it requires a wider donor area to be harvested when the efficiencies of the microscope are not employed. This destroys donor hair in the donor bank, limiting the long-term yield for possible future hair transplants. The larger the area of scalp that is removed, the more will be the unnecessary wasting of your valuable (and limited) hair resources. Any hair that is damaged during surgery is a lost asset that you will never again see or be able to use.

Growth:
Growth occurs after the patient leaves the doctor’s office – long after you have paid for the procedure. It takes 7-8 months for reasonable fullness to occur. One physician I know of has his staff routinely prepare single hair grafts out of two and three hair grafts, damaging [I am sure] the growth center on some of the single hairs, so it would be reasonable to expect less growth than if they graft had been prepared the NHI way. In our practice, we do everything possible to preserve the integrity of the follicular unit, so that hair growth centers are not damaged. That ensures that our graft growth will be high, while doctors who sub-divide follicular units just plainly kill-off hair and compromise long-term yield and fullness.

Price:
There is a difference between buying a product and a service. I can buy a BMW and look around for the dealer with the best price and be confident that the car was made under a uniform standard, in a manufacturing process remote from buyer or seller interference. The mass produced vehicle sold at Dealer A will be the same as the vehicle at Dealer B, so price becomes the most important variable to consider. With a service that is customized just for you, there are many more variables to consider.

So how does one determine value? Clearly, when one ‘price shops’ a hair transplant, most people focus upon the per graft price, as this is how most doctors calculate their fee. But you should ask, ‘what contributes to the value beyond the obvious price per graft fee structure?’ The answer is defined in my example where the doctor had instructed his staff to cut the grafts into their smallest elements (individual hairs) in order to increase the graft count so that his income would increase. In this example, the patient ended up with substantially less total hairs (and less fullness) than he could have gotten by doing it right. To make matters worse, he may have selected the doctor based upon quoted prices, only to find out that he got less hair and paid more overall, and to rub salt into an already angry wound, hair growth will probably be far less than what he actually had transplanted. He would have massively overpaid for what he got.

If you purchase 2000 follicular units, but you get half of the 4000 hairs a typical male would have, isn’t this an example of negative value? If the hairline is put in the wrong place, or the grafts are distributed in such a way that it does not maximize the demand/supply ratio, is that worth a discount? If the grafts are place too widely, requiring more surgeries, or too closely so that they may not grow in skin that is incapable of supporting that many grafts, was that worth the discount? If the grafts are trimmed too closely, or get dried out, or manhandled by being crammed into recipient sites by less experienced staff, causing the grafts to not grow, is that worth the discount?

I can go on and on, but value is not what you pay per graft, but the entire package of an ethical doctor, one who uses well trained and disciplined supportive staff who are focused upon quality, speed and your welfare and comfort (and are well paid so the doctor retains staff over time), etc… The doctor can hire people for a lower wage, but the doctor will not keep staff by underpaying them. You want the doctor to have long term employees who are loyal and feel that the doctor respects them recognizes their worth, staff that can understand that your welfare (as a patient) is tied to their welfare. Only some of the things I have just mentioned reflect the surgeon’s activities, while others reflect staff and organizational issues that add up producing a great results in a well run office.

Judgments:
Judgments reflect skill, education, training, logical thought processes and some wisdom (which takes time to obtain). Ethical doctors make sure that their judgment is not clouded by money.

When you put this all together, you will see that this is nothing more complicated than the old axiom, “Let the Buyer Beware”. Like buying a car, buying a service requires good, extensive research. A good buyer is an educated buyer. I would expect that those of you, who are good buyers, will take the time to learn the lessons I have outlined here. Once you are ready, consider the following:

  1. Does the doctor speak with authority? (see my CV, Medical Publications)
  2. What does the medical community think of the doctor or the medical group and the quality of his/their work? (see 2004 Golden Follicle Award)
  3. How does the doctor relate to new candidates for surgery? (see NHI Open House Events)
  4. Does the doctor treat patients with great respect? From the first contact with NHI, our goal is to make the patient feel comfortable. There are no salesmen at NHI, every prospective patient meets a doctor 100% of the time. This allows the doctor the opportunity to learn about the patient (and vice versa) so bonding can occur. The patient can tell, almost immediately, if he/she trusts and/or likes the doctor. After the initial consultation, 100% of our patients receive a letter which fully document not only what happened in the consultation, but also gives a written estimate reflecting the scope of the proposed work and the costs for that work.
  5. Do the doctor’s estimates come close to the actual outcomes? Lowballing is an unethical practice that we have taken a position against for years. Sometimes when unscrupulous salesmen are used, they sell the doctor’s service like a used car. When a doctor uses high pressure sales tactics, it tells you much about the doctor, his integrity and his need to push for a hard sell. A good reputation does not require a hard sell. The position we have taken on this issue has left me, at times, personally vulnerable from those that employ such tactics. But I have never veered away from a taking a strong position when it comes to defending the rights of patients over the rights of the business or other doctors, if they are not using ethical practices. There are many ethical doctors out there, find one before you hire a shoddy doctor to save you a few bucks.
  6. Does the doctor innovate? Is he a leader or a follower? (see Innovations and Contributions in my CV)
  7. Has the doctor been bombarded with legal issues? Our medical legal record is clear and clean. Make sure that you have done your due diligence by checking as many sources as you can find to determine the history of the medical practice.
  8. Is the doctor open to listening to your needs when you meet with him/her, or does he/she tell you what he wants to sell you? After our consult, we send a letter detailing our consultation. This is a great way to find out if we have a clear understanding of your goals so it is always put into writing.
  9. Does the doctor or salesman try to find out how much money you are planning to spend before giving you an estimate for proposed work? The doctor’s first priority should be what is or isn’t on top of your head, not what’s in your wallet. Run for the hills if you think that you are someone’s retirement account. Do you feel that the doctor is trying to pick your pockets? There is nothing wrong with being a businessman (I like to think that the two are compatible) but the doctor must show real caring for you and place your agenda first. Consider your gut reaction to the experience you have with your visit to his/her office – and pay attention to it.

In conclusion:
Let the buyer beware!

Hair Loss InformationThinning Pubic Hair from Finasteride? – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr. Rassman,

I am experiencing what I think may be a finasteride side effect that is really alarming and embarrassing.effect My pubic hair has been thinning for over a year. I am a 48 year old male and have been using finasteride (1/4 proscar) for a about 7 years with decent maintenance results, and also I have been using minoxidil 5% for the same time period.

I told my GP of my concern at my annual physical this past spring and he had no answer, but included testosterone in my blood work and it came back as in the normal range at 575. I have noticed some reduced body over the past 7 years on the finasteride and attributed it to the reduced DHT. I thought reduced DHT increased testerone which is responsible for axillary hair growth? Could the reduced DHT actually be thinning my pubic hair as well? I don’t want to quit finasteride, but should I do so?

Thanks for your advice

Block Quote

DHT does historically cause the appearance of pubic, underarm, beard, ear and nose hair. The pseudo-hermaphrodites that were studied in the original research who were devoid of DHT from very high doses of finasteride in their diet since birth and therefore largely absent of DHT, had very little facial or body hair. I would expect, therefore, that some people may see reversal of some of the things that DHT causes with DHT blocking drugs, but prior to your email, I have not seen or heard of any patient who complained about it. There is logical reasons to see this side effect, although clearly not common in my experience. If you stop the drug, then the benefits may be lost as the pubic hair returns (if it does do that at all).

If finasteride actually reversed nose, ear, beard, and ear hair, I am sure that most men who have too much hair in these places would rush to take finasteride, but alas, the stampede did not happen. That says a great deal about this type of a hair ‘removal’ phenomenon.

Doctors That Use the Densitometer – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dr Rassman
Do you have a list of doctors in the US that use and are skillful with the Densitometer?
Thank you

Block Quote

Go to the ISHRS website to look up doctors who specialize in hair diagnosis, treatment or hair restoration. Good dermatologists should also fall into this category. When you call their offices, before you make the actual appointment, ask them if they map out the degree of miniaturization on the scalp for quantifying the extent of balding or thinning. That is a better probing question than asking about an instrument I invented, since other doctors may not know it by the actual name I gave it. (FYI, the U.S. Patent I obtained for this was U.S. Patent #5,331,472 ‘Method and apparatus for measuring hair density’, issued July 1994).

Hair Loss InformationTaking Minoxidil and Propecia Together – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello Doctor,
How effective would a combination of propecia and Minoxidil be to fighting hair loss in the initial stages ? My hair started thinning in the past 11 months and now the scalp is noticeable. I recently started propecia and the Dermatologist advised taking Minoxidil 5% with it. I cant do it twice a day so he advised to apply it at least once a day at night. My question is I cant commit to the cumbersome process of applying it for more than 3 months. Will it benefit me if i take the combo for 3 months and then stop minoxidil 5% but continue on propecia indefinitely ? Will I gain/thicken my hair with minoxidil 5% once a day and will it sustain after 3 months once I stop taking it ? Please Reply
Thanks so much

Block Quote

I get this question quite a bit. Using minoxidil once a day has limited value. Using it for 3 months and then stopping has no long term value — once you stop it, you will lose any hair you may have gained. For men, Propecia is the right thing to do for hair loss caused by genetics. I generally tell people to start Propecia first, then to consider minoxidil after a year, only if the result from Propecia does not get them what they want. There is no guarantee that one or both will work for you.

Using the higher 5% dose of minoxidil may be more effective than the 2% solution, but unless you are really willing to commit to the process required for either of the drugs, do not embark on that path.

Hair Loss InformationStarting to Lose Hair at Age 19 – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Hello, I am 19 years of age. Over the past year I have found that I have lost alot of hair. All my life I have had thick hair. my whole family has relatively high hairlines, even my 13 year old brother. I have always had one although there was always alot of hair around the hairline. In recent months my hairline has been receeding noticably and I have found that hairs have come out when showering, sometimes just randomly in the day, and I find them in my mouth. There are no patchy bald spots. However the hairline is extremly thin and around the crown it has also thinned out. Even the hair at the sides do not feel half as weighty as they used to. I used to badly need a haircut every two weeks, now although I still do at times, it is more in the vain hope it will make my hair look better. It is whispy looking on top also. I also find my scalp feels odd although this could be in the mind. It has all happened suddenly.

Block Quote

You need to have your scalp mapped out for miniaturization to determine if you have genetic balding. If you do, it will follow a pattern much like those shown on the Norwood chart, as your hair starts to thin in these patterns before it becomes bald. Over 50 years ago, General MacArthur said, “Old Soldiers never die, they just fade away”. I will rework his quote by saying, “Hair never dies, it just fades away”. Some day, when hair cloning starts up or we figure out the missing link in the pathway that stops the hair from cycling in the normal manner, we might be able to revive those hairs that are present even in the baldest of men, but at age 19, lets start to crawl before we walk. Don’t live in fear of what may not be. Get a good doctor to diagnose you and then treat you appropriately, if treatment is needed.

Hair Loss InformationFinasteride & Prostate Cancer – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

In a recent article in the Journal of Urology, an article was published which addressed the relationship between prostate cancer and the drug finasteride. The authors came out of various universities (Dr. G. Andriole was the lead author, Ref: J Urol. 2005 Dec;174(6):2098-2104)

Simply stated, what I read suggested to me that they reviewed the 7 year Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial that was finished a few years ago and published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The conclusions of the original study showed that this drug (finasteride 5mgs) reduced the appearance of prostate cancer by a statistically significant degree. There were some questions about the ‘control’ group when compared to those that actually received the drug. These authors suggested that the difference in the severity of the malignancies that were identified between the two groups may not have been real, but rather they were the results of patient selection criteria based upon blood testing, amongst other things. This group still did feel that prostate cancer chemoprevention with finasteride needs further research, although I personally believe that they are ignoring good statistical evidence to the contrary. Keeping an open mind is always good.

Please note that I just wanted to share what I read with the readers of this blog. I do not own Merck stock and can not benefit from any opinions expressed here.

Diet Causing Receding Hairline in Woman? – Balding Blog

Several years ago from a stressful situation, my hair started receding. I then found out that I am hypothyroid. Over the years it stabilized, but recently due to severe dieting, it started receding some more. What can I do to stop the recession and what can I do to have some of the hair regrow? Thank you.

You provided the answer to your own question. The recent weight loss may have precipitated the hair loss you reported and you will certainly need a proper diet with a positive protein balance before the hair loss can be reversed (assuming that the weight loss is responsible). Radical diet alterations to get a jump on weight loss is something that is common in our overweight society and weight loss of just a few pounds can cause of hair loss. You can imagine where the genetic process exists, extreme dieting can accelerate what may take years to unfold on its own. Some authorities believe that short term loss, by as little as 4-8 pound, can precipitate hair loss in men or women.

You will also need to be sure that your thyroid and other endocrine organs are functioning normally, including hormonal balance in the various female hormones. Although you didn’t specifically say if you were a man or a woman, judging by the name you gave, I’m going to assume you’re female.


Balding Forum - Hair Loss Discussion

Paid advertisements (not an endorsement):


Hair Loss InformationRemoving a Hair Transplant – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

hi, i’ve had two hair transplant procedures in the past. over the last couple of years i have just been shaving my head. i feel very uncomfortable going anywhere without a hat because of my scars. i would just like to be able to shave my head without the scars being so obvious. they are mostly right at my front hairline. can i go to a physician to have the transplants removed? and if they are removed will my scalp where the transpants are taken out heal so those little puncture holes are not as noticible? or could a procedure such a dermabrasion or laser help to smooth out the area? thank you

Block Quote

Without seeing you it would be difficult to make an assessment. Please send photos to the email address on the Contact page.

Generally, it is difficult to put you back in time to the days before you had your hair transplanted. With that said, we can reverse it in many ways, and sometimes it might be brought back to the “before” status. I like to tell my patients that I have good news and bad news about hair transplants: they are permanent, so get it done right the first time. If you are amongst the unfortunate that did not time your procedure correctly with current technology, then the good news is that there is a great deal of experience now in removing or hiding the ugly plugs of the older types of hair transplants.

Hair Loss InformationCole’s FIT and BHT Procedures – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

What are your opinions on the techniques and procedures of Dr. John Cole, such as his FIT procedures which he acknowledges was developed from your FUE. However, the FIT is allegedly an improvement. Also, what do think about his claims regarding Body Hair Transplants. I know you have made previous comments regarding BHT’s. However, I am asking specifically about Dr. Coles procedures regarding BHT.

Block Quote

FUE and FIT is exactly the same procedure, with some technique variations. There are a number of technical ways to do it and FIT is a proprietary brand name developed by Dr. Cole to show some unique identification for him. Body hair transplants are new with not much validation from other doctors. There are only a few patients with any history to the process and we do not know much about success rates in, let’s say, 100 patients overall. I am not surprised that they may work, but body hair is limited in numbers, usually growing as a single hair unit although there are some two-hair groups. The hair has a different character than scalp hair, but Dr. Cole’s claims have no real science with them, although I am not saying that it is not true, just not proven scientifically. I would not jump into it just yet. It is, in my opinion, still an experimental procedure.

Hair Loss InformationTransplanting Hair Into Burned Tissue – Hair Loss Information – Balding Blog

Dear Dr.
I am a recovered burn patient from childhood with forehead scars that extend to my left temple area. I was able to grow my hair to cover it as a young man until my late 30’s. My hair started to thin and I now wear a hair system to cover and blend the non hair scarred area. Are hair transplants now being able to be transplanted into scarred areas that are cosemetically acceptable. I have been told that bloodflow below my scarred areas is still good. Thank you for your response.

Block Quote

If your skin is what we call a full thickness, hair may be able to grow from it. If it is covered with a split thickness of skin and scar, it may not support hair growth. There are things that can be done today to bring your hair-baring skin here and may include a variety of surgeries like flaps, and balloon-stretching the normal scalp and rearranging it to cover the bare area. Some of the results are remarkable. I would be happy to give you an opinion and as you’ve indicated that you are in Southern California, I would suggest that you make an appointment with me and maybe together, we can address your problem. Please call my office at 800-NEW-HAIR to set up a free consultation.