Hair transplantation
is a surgical technique that precedes individual hair follicles from a part of
the body called the 'donor site' to a bald. It is essentially used to treatment
male pattern baldness. In this minimally invasive method, grafts containing
hair follicles that are genetically immune to balding are transplanted to the
bald scalp. Hair transplantation can also be used to reinstall eyelashes,
eyebrows, beard hair, chest hair, and pubic hair and to fill in scars caused by
accidents or surgery such as face-lifts and previous hair transplants. Hair
transplantation contradict from skin grafting in that grafts carry almost all
of the epidermis and dermis surrounding the hair follicle, and many tiny grafts
are transplanted preferably than a single strip of skin.
Types of surgery
There are a number of supplications for Hair Transplant
Surgery, cover:
·
Androgenetic Alopecia
·
Eyebrow Transplant
·
Frontal Hair Line Lowering or Reconstruction
If donor hair numbers from the back of the head are
inadequate, it is possible to perform Body Hair Transplantation (BHT) on
suitable, applicant who have obtainable donor hair on the chest, back,
shoulders, torso and/or legs. Body Hair Transplant Surgery can only be
accomplish by the FUE harvesting method and, so, need the skills of an
experienced FUE Surgeon. However, there is some element for a potential BHT
candidate to consider prior to surgery. These contain understanding the natural
variance in textural attribute between body hair and scalp hair, growth rates,
and having realistic assumption about the results of BHT surgery.
Post-operative care
Throughout the first ten days, effectively all of the
transplanted hairs, naturally traumatized by their relocation, will fall out.
This is mentions to as "shock loss". After two to three months new
hair will starts to grow from the moved follicles. The patient's hair will grow
normally, and ongoing to thicken through the next six to nine months. Any
future hair loss is likely to be only from untreated areas. Some patients
return to use medications to postpone such loss, while others plan a subsequent
transplant procedure to deal with these occurrences.
Side effects
Hair thinning, known as "shock loss", is a normal side
effect that is usually not permanent. Bald patches are also common, as fifty to
a hundred hairs can be waste or loss each day.
Other side effects contain swelling of areas such as the
scalp and forehead. If this becomes intolerable, medication may ease the
swelling. Supplementary, the patient must be careful if their scalp starts
itching, as scratching will make it worse and cause scabs to form. A
moisturizer or massage shampoo may be used.
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