I have been touching and scratching my recipient area for the past month since the transplant was done. Should I worry about these red dots?
I’m four months postop and I’ll be honest I was a little embarrassed to get a haircut because of the scar but now I’m just embracing it. I’d rather have a visible star in the back of my head then no hair on top.
The scar can be concealed with SMP or just let your hair grow out a bit more. I agreed with your comment as most of my patients feel the same way as you do about getting their hair back. Strip Hair Transplants or FUE all have their cosmetic costs so there is no free ride if you want to get your hair back. For those of you who are going to make a decision to get a hair transplant, be sure to speak with your surgeon about the down sides of FUE and Strip surgery before making a decision for a hair transplant.
Long and short, what I wanted to know was whether your natural balding pattern that is determined by your genetics eventually manifests itself despite finasteride use or not. Hence, I asked, does finasteride just delay the inevitable, or does it continue to work to prevent the progression of hair loss for the duration it is taken?
When you have an advanced balding pattern as you do, transplanting the frontal half is a great starting point because the man in the mirror will look hairy. Make sure that your doctor and you discuss your residual donor supply to see if you can address the crown at a future time. I have written articles on transplanting men with advanced balding patterns when they don’t have the donor supply to meet their needs. If your surgeon follows my published articles, you can work your way to the back of your head, regardless of your donor supply. I like what you are doing!
Ever since my hair started thinning it literally took over my life it’s all I think about I’m only 22 and I also overthink and worry about what people would say I’d they noticed it and I’m living in fear, I’m also scared how I’m gonna find a wife if I actually lose all my hair. I also can’t open up to my family about it cuz they’ll make fun of me or clown me it’s just the worse feeling in the world, I’m on oral min 2.5 for 4 months now I’m getting regrowth but I was little far back so it’s gonna take a while I also think that if might not regrow back. What’s crazy is I don’t even have mpb I have seb derm hair loss when I was 16 I never took care of my hair I wouldn’t wash it for weeks and it caused my hair to thin. If I do get my hair back one day I would not complain about anything and I’d be the happiest man alive
Not washing your hair when you were younger, did not cause hair loss. You are not equipped to manage this process, that is clear. You need to see a good doctor who can manage the process for you to make you “the happiest man alive.”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9678755/
The pericardial effusion which has now been reported even on the low dose of 1.25 mgs which I prescribe often, creates warnings with swelling of the feet, legs, face and other body parts. When fluid builds up inside of the pericardial cavity (the sac around the heart), the heart has difficulty with blood return and thereby goes into heart failure over a period of time. Systemic swelling should be the warning everyone should recognize, and then stop the drug and contact their doctor.
The new law in Turkay is that if you perform hair transplantation and are not a licensed doctor (plastic surgeon, dermatologist, or medical esthetic certified doctor (you will be sentenced to 1-3 years of imprisonment, and all health institutions that provide space to them or rent operating rooms to them will pay a penalty of $8000 US. Technicians will be restricted to only implanting grafts.
I received this information from a reputable blog site. There is so much money each year coming into Turkey, it is hard to imagine that such a law will be enforced. For those reading this blog, please let me know if your surgeries were cancelled in Turkey by emailing me to williamrassman33@gmail.com.
Significance as quoted by Ali Emre Ksaradeniz: “Turkey would lose 99% of its hair transplant market. 99% of the hair clinics would go bankrupt. The health Tourism wound collapse. Millions of people would lose their jobs. Some of them including techs, would lose jobs permanently. Thousand of licenses given would lose their relevance. At least $1 Billion come into Turkey would vanish into thin hair. The black market wound find a new location in the world.”
Do you think that this is the government’s plan?
I’m about to start taking 2.5mg of oral minoxidil to attempt to thicken my beard. I will be taking this 2.5mg daily for about 1 and half years until beard hairs become terminal. After , they become terminal I will stop the oral minoxidil. Is this a good plan? BTW, I noted shedding on my scalp when I started minoxidil so I added finasteride to address this problem.
Hair that is induced by minoxidil is minoxidil dependent, so getting the benefit from minoxidil for your beard and then stopping it is not in your best interests. Shedding associated with one of these drugs are an indication that they are working. Just wait out the shedding.
It’s now been 1 year since I started Fin only. I’m mid 40s and been thinning for 15+ years. Finally took the plunge to get on Finasteride 1 year ago.
Nice improvement, but still now where you need to be. You might add microneedling on the left side to induce more growth as finasteride doesn’t have a great track record on frontal hair loss reversal in men over 40.
I am getting a good response in my hairline with microneedling; however, I now want to take it to the areas I am thinning. Is it safe to do that?
Assuming that you have miniaturization that you want to try to reverse, yes you can microneedle in areas of miniaturization. If you should accidentally microneedle in normal hair, there will be no problems resulting from such an error.
I started to lose an unusual amount of hair about a year and a half ago. I realized that it was likely due to simultaneously hardcore intermittent fasting (Telogen Effluvium) and traction alopecia caused by a regretful man bun. Most of my hair is back now, and I’m not balding, but I lost density behind my hairline, and it shows sometimes, especially under overhead light. Does PRP save some follicles and regain some density?
By its nature, traction alopecia is usually an irreversible type of balding. I doubt that PRP will bring back those hairs. If it is extensive, then hair transplants work nicely. The telogen effluvium, on the other hand, is a temporary process and will reverse on its own. After re-reading your post a second time, I question if you ever had traction alopecia.
You are heading to a Full Norwood Class 7 pattern of balding and, therefore, must plan accordingly because you, I am sure, are expecting to live a long time and will always want to look normal and hairy. I have transplanted many men like you, but first, I want to determine your donor supply and your donor mass. These two critical measures will tell me if you have enough hair to cover the eventual pattern and, most importantly, what you can expect realistically.