If you're considering hair
replacement...Hair loss is primarily caused by
a combination of aging, a change in hormones, and a
family history of baldness. As a rule, the earlier hair
loss begins, the more severe the baldness will become.
Hair loss can also be caused by burns or trauma, in
which case hair replacement surgery is considered a
reconstructive treatment, and may be covered by health
insurance.
If you and your doctor have determined that hair
transplants are the best option for you, you can feel
comfortable knowing that board-certified plastic
surgeons have been successfully performing this type of
procedure for more than thirty years.
If you're considering hair replacement surgery, this
brochure will give you a basic understanding of the
variety of procedures involved. It can't answer all of
your questions, since a lot depends on your individual
circumstances. Ask your surgeon if there is anything you
don't understand about the procedure you plan to have.
THE TRUTH ABOUT HAIR LOSS
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Baldness is often blamed on poor circulation to the
scalp, vitamin deficiencies, dandruff, and even
excessive hat-wearing. All of these theories have been
disproved. It's also untrue that hair loss can be
determined by looking at your maternal grandfather, or
that 40-year-old men who haven't lost their hair will
never lose it.
THE BEST CANDIDATES FOR HAIR
REPLACEMENT
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Hair replacement surgery can enhance your appearance
and your self-confidence, but the results won't
necessarily match your ideal. Before you decide to have
surgery, think carefully about your expectations and
discuss them with your surgeon.
It's important to understand that all hair
replacement techniques use your existing hair. The goal
of surgery is to find the most efficient uses for
existing hair.
Hair replacement candidates must have healthy hair
growth at the back and sides of the head to serve as
donor areas. Donor areas are the places on the head from
which grafts and flaps are taken. Other factors, such as
hair color, texture and waviness or curliness may also
affect the cosmetic result. There are a number of
techniques used in hair replacement surgery. Sometimes,
two or more techniques are used to achieve the best
results.
Transplant techniques, such as punch grafts,
mini-grafts, micro-grafts, slit grafts, and strip grafts
are generally performed on patients who desire a more
modest change in hair fullness. Flaps, tissue-expansion
and scalp-reduction are procedures that are usually more
appropriate for patients who desire a more dramatic
change.
Remember, there are limits to what can be
accomplished. An individual with very little hair might
not be advised to undergo hair replacement surgery.
HAIR LOSS IN WOMEN
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Some doctors estimate that one in five women will
experience some degree of hair loss usually caused by
aging, illness, or hormonal changes after menopause.
Women tend to experience a subtle thinning all over the
scalp rather than losing hair in patches as is common in
men. To correct the problem, some women choose to wear a
wig or hair extensions. Others have had some success
using a topical prescriptive drug. The effectiveness of
such drugs varies in some patients and simply prevents
further hair loss without stimulating any appreciable
new growth. Hair replacement surgery may be the answer
for those who feel uncomfortable with either of these
options.
Because mini-grafts are usually the surgical
treatment of choice for filling-in thinning areas, good
candidates for this procedure should have dense hair
growth at the back of the head. Mini-grafts are
harvested from this dense area and replanted in thinning
areas to create a fuller look. Occasionally flap and
tissue expansion procedures may be used if the
individual is judged to be a good candidate.
If you're considering a hair replacement procedure,
it's important to understand that you will never have
the coverage you had prior to your hair loss, but
surgery may camouflage the thin areas and give you more
fullness.
ALL SURGERY CARRIES SOME
UNCERTAINTY AND RISK
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Hair replacement surgery is normally safe when
performed by a qualified, experienced physician. Still,
individuals vary greatly in their physical reactions and
healing abilities, and the outcome is never completely
predictable.
As in any surgical procedure, infection may occur.
Excessive bleeding and/or wide scars, sometimes called
"stretch-back" scars caused by tension may result from
some scalp-reduction procedures.
In transplant procedures, there is a risk that some
of the grafts won't "take." Although it is normal for
the hair contained within the plugs to fall out before
establishing regrowth in its new location, sometimes the
skin plug dies and surgery must be repeated. At times,
patients with plug grafts will notice small bumps on the
scalp that form at the transplant sites. These areas can
usually be camouflaged with surrounding hair.
When hair loss progresses after surgery, an
unnatural, "patchy" look may result-especially if the
newly-placed hair lies next to patches of hair that
continue to thin out. If this happens, additional
surgery may be required.
PLANNING YOUR SURGERY
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Hair replacement surgery is an individualized
treatment. To make sure that every surgical option is
available to you, find a doctor who has experience
performing all types of replacement techniques-flaps and
tissue expansion as well as transplants. Look elsewhere
if your doctor tells you that he or she has perfected
one technique that can "do it all."
In your initial consultation, your surgeon will
evaluate your hair growth and loss, review your family
history of hair loss, and find out if you've had any
previous hair replacement surgery. Your surgeon will
also ask you about your lifestyle and discuss your
expectations and goals for surgery.
Medical conditions that could cause problems during
or after surgery, such as uncontrolled high blood
pressure, blood-clotting problems, or the tendency to
form excessive scars, should also be checked by your
doctor. Be sure to tell your surgeon if you smoke or are
taking any drugs or medications, especially aspirin or
other drugs that affect clotting.
If you decide to have hair replacement surgery, your
surgeon will explain anesthesia, the type of facility
where the surgery will be performed, and the risks and
cost involved. Don't hesitate to ask your doctor any
questions.
Make sure you understand your surgeon's plan-which
procedures will be used and how long each will take. Ask
your doctor to give you an idea of what you will look
like after the procedure or, in the case of grafts,
after each stage of treatment.
PREPARING FOR YOUR SURGERY
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Your surgeon will give you specific instructions on
how to prepare for surgery, including guidelines on
eating and drinking, smoking, and taking and avoiding
certain vitamins and medications. Carefully following
these instructions will help your surgery go more
smoothly. If you smoke, it's especially important to
stop at least a week or two before surgery; smoking
inhibits blood flow to the skin, and can interfere with
healing.
You should arrange for someone to drive you home
after your surgery. Plan to take it easy for a day or
two after the procedure and arrange for assistance if
you think you'll need it.
WHERE YOUR SURGERY WILL BE
PERFORMED
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Hair replacement surgery is usually performed in a
physician's office-based facility or in an outpatient
surgery center. Rarely does it require a hospital stay.
TYPES OF ANESTHESIA
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Hair replacement surgery, no matter what technique is
used, is usually performed using a local anesthesia
along with sedation to make you relaxed and comfortable.
Your scalp will be insensitive to pain, but you may be
aware of some tugging or pressure.
General anesthesia may be used for more complex cases
involving tissue expansion or flaps. If general
anesthesia is used, you'll sleep through the procedure.
THE SURGERY
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Hair transplantation involves removing small pieces
of hair-bearing scalp grafts from a donor site and
relocating them to a bald or thinning area. Grafts
differ by size and shape. Round-shaped punch grafts
usually contain about 10-15 hairs. The much smaller
mini-graft contains about two to four hairs; and the
micro-graft, one to two hairs. Slit grafts, which are
inserted into slits created in the scalp, contain about
four to10 hairs each; strip grafts are long and thin and
contain 30-40 hairs.
Generally, several surgical sessions may be needed to
achieve satisfactory fullness-and a healing interval of
several months is usually recommended between each
session. It may take up to two years before you see the
final result with a full transplant series. The amount
of coverage you'll need is partly dependent upon the
color and texture of your hair. Coarse, gray or
light-colored hair affords better coverage than fine,
dark-colored hair. The number of large plugs
transplanted in the first session varies with each
individual, but the average is about 50. For mini-grafts
or micro-grafts, the number can be up to 700 per
session.
Just before surgery, the "donor area" will be trimmed
short so that the grafts can be easily accessed and
removed. For punch grafts, your doctor may use a special
tube-like instrument made of sharp carbon steel that
punches the round graft out of the donor site so it can
be replaced in the area to be covered-generally the
frontal hairline. For other types of grafts, your doctor
will use a scalpel to remove small sections of
hair-bearing scalp, which will be divided into tiny
sections and transplanted into tiny holes or slits
within the scalp. When grafts are taken, your doctor may
periodically inject small amounts of saline solution
into the scalp to maintain proper skin strength. The
donor site holes may be closed with stitches-for punch
grafts, a single stitch may close each punch site; for
other types of grafts, a small, straight-line scar will
result. The stitches are usually concealed with the
surrounding hair.
To maintain healthy circulation in the scalp, the
grafts are placed about one-eighth of an inch apart. In
later sessions, the spaces between the plugs will be
filled in with additional grafts. Your doctor will take
great care in removing and placement of grafts to ensure
that the transplanted hair will grow in a natural
direction and that hair growth at the donor site is not
adversely affected.
After the grafting session is complete, the scalp
will be cleansed and covered with gauze. You may have to
wear a pressure bandage for a day or two. Some doctors
allow their patients to recover bandage-free.
Plastic surgeons are the leaders in tissue expansion,
a procedure commonly used in reconstructive surgery to
repair burn wounds and injuries with significant skin
loss. Its application in hair replacement surgery has
yielded dramatic results-significant coverage in a
relatively short amount of time.
In this technique, a balloon-like device called a
tissue expander is inserted beneath hair-bearing scalp
that lies next to a bald area. The device is gradually
inflated with salt water over a period of weeks, causing
the skin to expand and grow new skin cells. This causes
a bulge beneath the hair-bearing scalp, especially after
several weeks.
When the skin beneath the hair has stretched
enough-usually about two months after the first
operation-another procedure is performed to bring the
expanded skin over to cover the adjacent bald area. For
more information about tissue expansion, ask your
plastic surgeon for the American Society of Plastic
Surgeons, Inc. brochure entitled, Tissue Expansion:
Creating New Skin from Old.
Flap surgery: Flap surgery on the scalp has been
performed successfully for more than 20 years. This
procedure is capable of quickly covering large areas of
baldness and is customized for each individual patient.
The size of the flap and its placement are largely
dependent upon the patient's goals and needs. One flap
can do the work of 350 or more punch grafts.
A section of bald scalp is cut out and a flap of
hair-bearing skin is lifted off the surface while still
attached at one end. The hair-bearing flap is brought
into its new position and sewn into place, while
remaining "tethered" to its original blood supply.
As you heal, you'll notice that the scar is
camouflaged-or at least obscured-by relocated hair,
which grows to the very edge of the incision.
In recent years, plastic surgeons have made
significant advances in flap techniques, combining flap
surgery and scalp reduction for better coverage of the
crown; or with tissue expansion, to provide better
frontal coverage and a more natural hairline.
Scalp reduction: This technique is sometimes referred
to as advancement flap surgery because sections of
hair-bearing scalp are pulled forward or "advanced" to
fill in a bald crown.
Scalp reduction is for coverage of bald areas at the
top and back of the head. It's not beneficial for
coverage of the frontal hairline. After the scalp is
injected with a local anesthetic, a segment of bald
scalp is removed. The pattern of the section of removed
scalp varies widely, depending on the patient's goals.
If a large amount of coverage is needed, doctors
commonly remove a segment of scalp in an inverted
Y-shape. Excisions may also be shaped like a U, a
pointed oval, or some other figure.
The skin surrounding the cut-out area is loosened and
pulled, so that the sections of hair-bearing scalp can
be brought together and closed with stitches. It's
likely that you'll feel a strong tugging at this point,
and occasional pain.
AFTER YOUR SURGERY
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How you feel after surgery depends on the extent and
complexity of the procedure. Any aching, excessive
tightness, or throbbing can be controlled with pain
medication prescribed by your physician.
If bandages are used, they will usually be removed
one day later. You may gently wash your hair within two
days following surgery. Any stitches will be removed in
a week to 10 days. Be sure to discuss the possibility of
swelling, bruising, and drainage with your surgeon.
Because strenuous activity increases blood flow to
the scalp and may cause your transplants or incisions to
bleed, you may be instructed to avoid vigorous exercise
and contact sports for at least three weeks. Some
doctors also advise that sexual activity be avoided for
at least 10 days after surgery.
To make sure that your incisions are healing
properly, your doctor will probably want to see you
several times during the first month after surgery. It's
important that you carefully follow any advice you
receive at these follow-up visits.
GETTING BACK TO NORMAL
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How soon you resume your normal routine depends on
the length, complexity and type of surgery you've had.
You may feel well enough to go back to work and resume
normal, light activity after several days.
Many patients who have had transplants (plugs or
other grafts) are dismayed to find that their "new" hair
falls out within six weeks after surgery. Remember, this
condition is normal and almost always temporary. After
hair falls out, it will take another five to six weeks
before hair growth resumes. You can expect about a
half-inch of growth per month.
FOLLOW-UP PROCEDURES
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You may need a surgical "touch-up" procedure to
create more natural-looking results after your incisions
have healed. Sometimes, this involves blending, a
filling-in of the hairline using a combination of
mini-grafts, micro-grafts, or slit grafts. Or, if you've
had a flap procedure, a small bump called a "dog ear"
may remain visible on the scalp. Your doctor can
surgically remove this after complete healing has
occurred.
In general, it's best to anticipate that you will
need a touch-up procedure. Your surgeon can usually
predict how extensive your follow-up surgery is likely
to be.