Bizymoms.com, the premier work-at-home community on the Internet with more than 5 million visitors per year, has interviewed Dr. Robert M. Bernstein in order to answer readers’ common questions about hair restoration and hair loss.
Follicular Unit
Dr. Bernstein Answers Hair Restoration Questions From Bizymoms.com Readers
February 9th, 2010Rating:
Topic: Hair Transplant
Tags: Donor Hair, Eyebrow, Eyebrow Restoration, Eyebrow Transplant, Follicular Unit, Follicular Unit Extraction, Follicular Unit Grafts, Follicular Unit Transplant, Hair Growth, Hair Loss, Hair Restoration, Hair Transplant, Hair Transplant Surgery, Hair Transplantation, Hairline, Laser Therapy, Latisse/Bimatoprost, Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT), Microscope, Propecia/Finasteride, Rogaine/Minoxidil, Shedding
Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 2:39 pm
After Hair Transplant, Do Patients Wear Bandage And If So How Long?
February 2nd, 2010Q: Do patients need to wear a bandage after the surgery and for how long?
A: In a properly performed follicular unit hair transplant, the patient can remove any bandages the day after the procedure and gently shower/shampoo the transplanted area.
The bandages do not need to be reapplied.
The reason the dressing can be removed so soon is that follicular unit grafts fit into tiny needle-size incisions that heal in just one day.
Rating:
Topic: Post-op
Tags: After Your Hair Restoration, Follicular Unit, Follicular Unit Grafts, Hair Transplant Bandages, Incision, Post-op, Post-op Dressing, Scalp Healing, Shampoo After Hair Transplant, Shower After Hair Transplant
Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 8:11 am
After Hair Transplant, What Is Recommended Hair Length To Hide Scar?
January 25th, 2010Q: I never kept my hair really long, what length can I wear my hair after a hair transplant to hide that I had a procedure?
A: Hair transplants, whether using the strip method to harvest the donor hair or by extracting individual follicular units one-by-one directly from the scalp, will leave some scarring. If the hair is long enough so that the underlying scalp is not visible, these scars will not be seen.
The quality and density of a person’s donor hair will affect this coverage and determine how short a person may keep his hair. In some cases the back and sides can be cut to a few millimeters, in others it would need to be kept longer. Since there is no scarring in the recipient area (the front and top of the scalp where the grafts are placed) the hair in these areas may be kept at any length.
Rating:
Topic: Hair Transplant
Tags: Appearance After Hair Transplant, Camouflage Donor Scar, Donor Hair, Donor Hair Density, Donor Scar, Follicular Unit, Follicular Unit Extraction Scarring, Follicular Unit Grafts, Hair Length To Hide Scar, Hair Quality, Hair Transplant, Recipient Sites, Scarring, Strip Harvesting
Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 7:47 am
In Follicular Unit Hair Transplant, Can You Double-up Follicular Units and Still Call it FUT?
November 9th, 2009Q: Could you accept easing of the very strict definition of FUT, which you published about 15 years ago? Could you agree to use mixture of single FU and double FU under the name of FUT?
A: One would never want grafts larger than the largest original follicular units or the results will not look natural. The artificially large grafts will stand out in relatively thin surroundings. If one were to try to fix this by transplanting the doubled FUs very close together (over one or more sessions) one risks running out of grafts for other areas of the scalp. In other words, you can’t fool mother nature.
Rating:
Topic: Follicular Unit Transplant
Tags: Crown, Donor Hair Density, Follicular Unit, Follicular Unit Grafts, Follicular Unit Transplant, Four-hair Follicular Unit, Graft Dissection, Hair Transplant Procedure, Hairline, One-hair Follicular Unit, Two-hair Follicular Unit
Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 12:31 pm
What are Options for Fixing Wide Donor Scars?
October 5th, 2009Q: I would like to have the donor area from an old hair transplant repaired so it does not show the scar when I cut my hair shorter. What are my options?
A: Widened scars can be improved in two ways: they can be re-excised to make the scar finer, or hair can be placed into the scar to make it less visible.
Rating:
Topic: Repairs
Tags: Appearance After Hair Transplant, Bernstein Medical - Center for Hair Restoration, Cortisone, Donor Area, Donor Area Closure, Donor Scar, Follicular Unit, Follicular Unit Extraction, Follicular Unit Grafts, Hair Transplant Repair, Hair Transplants, Hypertrophic, Incision, Scar Excision, Scar Revision, Wide Scar
Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 2:20 pm
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