Articles
Hair Beauty
Hair Loss: Procedures to Avoid | Hair Loss: Procedures to Avoid |
|
|
|
|
Be aware that many physicians in this country and abroad perform outdated and even dangerous hair restoration techniques.
One reason is economics. To perform state-of-the art follicular unit hair transplantation, a physician or group has to revamp the infrastructure of their practice. They have to hire and train a full-time staff of technicians, purchase binocular stereomicroscopes, and most likely expand the size of their facilities. The time needed to perform a quality hair restoration procedure can take any where from five to 10 hours -- an entire work day. This is much longer than the older, less-demanding techniques. Also, there's a learning curve involved in converting a practice. It usually takes several months for a physician and staff to learn to perform these newer techniques in an efficient manner. For these reasons, some physicians offer the following procedures but we advise you to avoid them. Flap and Free-Form FlapA flap of hair bearing skin is moved from the side of the scalp to the front hairline by cutting it on three sides, but not separating it from its blood supply or severing it completely from the scalp. The procedure is major surgery and is performed in a hospital. A flap is one inch wide and approximately three to seven inches long. It has to be twisted for the hair-bearing side of the flap to end up facing outward from the head once it is shifted over and stitched into the surgically removed balding area. An unsightly "knot" will always form where the flap has to be twisted. Another type of flap known as the free-form flap is created when all four sides are cut and the flap is completely removed from the donor area so that its new position in the balding area can be set in a direction of natural growth. This is not a procedure recommended for men or women with common androgenetic alopecia and should be reserved for severely disfigured patients such as burn or accident victims. Other serious problems with these procedures can include: Necrosis, the chance of a partial or complete death of the flap, leaving a bad scar.
Linear or Line GraftsA three- to four-mm linear strip of donor hair is removed from the side or back of the head and instead of dividing the strip into follicular unit grafts, the entire strip or large parts of it are transplanted. Since this large graft can't be placed in tiny recipient sites, a trench must be surgically cut into the bald area and the large graft is placed into the trench. As hair grows, it looks like a manmade line of hair that is not cosmetically acceptable. Round or Square GraftsThese are the original, standard, out-of-date pluggy-looking grafts. Each three- to five-mm graft is made with a hole punch device, resulting in a plug of hair about the size of a pencil eraser. Whether round or square, these large grafts are too large and do not resemble the way hair grows naturally from the head. Round or Square Grafts continued...When transplanted, because the grafts are so large and therefore compromise the blood supply, hair in the middle of the graft often does not grow, leaving the patient with a doughnut effect. These large grafts are responsible for what looks like doll hair -- a pluggy look of islands of hair in an ocean, as they are now described. Cobble-stoning, a common scalp deformity in hair restoration patients, is caused by this procedure. Even the more recently developed smaller version of the grafts -- the mini grafts and micro grafts -- can give a less-than-natural appearance, which is why transplants should be made up of naturally occurring grafts called follicular units comprised of one to four hairs. Scalp ReductionAlso known as alopecia reduction (AR), galeoplasty (GP), or male pattern reduction (MPR), scalp reductions can result in an unattractive appearance. Performed in the doctor's office under local anesthesia, the bald part of the scalp at the top or crown of the head is cut away, and the edges of the nearby hair bearing skin are sewn together, bringing the hair-bearing scalp from either side to meet in the middle. In some cases a scar results, commonly know as a "dog ear" scar. Scalp reduction problems also include:
Hair LiftsThis is a more radical form of scalp reduction. Dissection or loosening of the scalp skin is done at a level below the major arteries of the scalp. The procedure may leave parts of your head permanently numb. Unlike other scalp reductions, this is major surgery, which requires hospitalization and general anesthesia. It leaves visible scars around the ears, and additional hair loss is often a result.
Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.20
3.20 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."Newer articles items
Older articles items
|
|||||||
| < Prev |
|---|