Posts Tagged: Hair Transplant to Camouflage Scar

What Type of Hair Loss in Women is Suitable for Hair Transplant?

August 10th, 2009

Q: What type of female hair loss is suitable for a hair transplant?

A: A smaller percent of women with genetic hair loss are good candidates for a hair transplant as compared to men. The reason is that hair loss in women tends to be diffuse (i.e. there is thinning all over). In this situation, there is no stable donor area to use for the hair restoration.

Women with hair loss localized to the front and/or top of their scalp and good hair on the back and sides, can be excellent candidates for hair restoration, but it is important for the doctor to determine this by measuring the hair density in the donor area. This can be performed in the office using an instrument called a video-densitometer.

Conditions other than genetic thinning can be treated with hair transplantation, such as traction alopeica and hair loss from surgical scars, but some conditions, such as alopecia areata, do not respond well. It is important to have a dermatologist make sure that the condition is treatable by surgery before considering a hair transplant.

Reminder: Bernstein Medical – Center for Hair Restoration will be holding a Women’s Hair Loss Open House at our facility in Midtown Manhattan, New York City on Wednesday, August 12th, 2009 (4-6pm). You can register to attend the open house by following this link. We look forward to seeing you there!


Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 9:38 am

Can Follicular Unit Extraction Hair Transplant Repair Scar on Scalp?

April 17th, 2009

Q: I wanted to determine if I would be a candidate for FUE (to camouflage a scar). After reading through your vastly informative website, I had become aware that the Fox test is necessary to determine patient viability for FUE. When I mentioned the test, I believe I heard you say it was unnecessary. Please confirm if a Fox test is, in fact, necessary.

A: I generally perform FOX tests on patients when I am considering a FUE hair transplant. I do not routinely perform FOX tests before repairs (or on eyebrow transplants) where the number of grafts is relatively small.

The purpose of FUE is to identify those patients in whom FUE is particularly inefficient — i.e. where there is a greater than average risk of damage during the harvest. If this is the case, I would not perform the hair transplant, since even slight inefficiencies create a significant problem when thousands of grafts are transplanted.

Remember, compared to Follicular Unit Transplant (FUT), FUE is a relatively inefficient procedure to begin with. Even when a small FUE hair transplant is performed (i.e., in a Norwood Class 3) we have to anticipate that eventually the person will need a large amount of grafts, so a FOX test is still important.

However, when the total number of grafts is small, such as in scar revisions or eyebrow restoration, small inefficiencies are not as important.

In addition, with repairs, the donor area is altered so that extraction in different areas may be very be different, rendering a FOX test in scar revisions far less useful.

Finally, if a FUE hair transplant is started, but then aborted due to extraction difficulties, the patient must either be reverted to a strip (which was not the preferred means of harvesting or a FUT would have been planned to begin with) or the patient will be left with a partial procedure – both less than ideal situations. However, if a FUE repair has to be aborted due to the inability to efficiently harvest hair, no harm was done; we just won’t be able to achieve our goal.


Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 8:09 am

Dr. Bernstein Performs Hair Transplant on Fox News Hair Loss Special

March 16th, 2009

Dr. Robert M. Bernstein — of Bernstein Medical – Center for Hair Restoration — performs a follicular unit hair transplant on television as part of a Fox News NY special segment on hair loss and hair transplantation. Dr. Bernstein uses the FUT procedure to correct hair loss and camouflage scarring that resulted from the surgical removal of a large skin cancer on the patient’s scalp.

Watch a 1-minute video clip of the program:


Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 12:19 pm

Can Hair Transplant at Temples Cover Facelift Scar?

January 27th, 2009

Q: I had a facelift about a year ago and the skin on the sides by my temples is really bare. It makes the scar a little obvious too. Can you transplant hair just at the temples to cover the scar?

A: Hair loss in the temple area following a facelift is relatively common and can be treated with a hair transplant. If there is scar tissue, the hair restoration will generally require more than one session.


Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 4:38 am

Can One Have Hair Transplant to Cover Single Bald Patch?

December 16th, 2008

Q: I just started to lose my hair but it’s just in one spot, like a circle on the left side of my head. Do you ever do a hair transplant just into a bald spot and not the whole head?

A: It is possible to have a hair restoration procedure into a single bald spot. However, it would be most beneficial to first determine the cause of the condition.

Bald spots caused by alopecia areata (an autoimmune disease) are best treated with injections of steroids into the scalp, rather than with a hair transplant. In fact, the transplanted hair can be rejected in patients with this condition.

Traumatic scars (i.e. from an accident) can be treated with follicular unit hair transplantation as the hair grows quite well in scar tissue, as long as the scar in scar tissue, as long as the scar is not thickened (hypertrophic).


Posted by Robert M. Bernstein M.D. at 6:54 am



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