Thursday, September 30, 2010

Two Different Hair Transplant Surgeons: Differing Balding Assessments and Treatment Plans?

This question comes from a member of our Hair Restoration Discussion Forums and Social Community:

I recently underwent two separate consultations with different, recommended hair transplant surgeons and each one provided me with unique and differing assessments. Each hair restoration physician said I was a different level on the Norwood balding scale, and then suggested an unrelated number of grafts (one doctor suggested more and the other suggested less). Is one surgeon right and the other wrong? What should I do?

Differing hair transplantation assessments is most likely a fairly common occurrence, and it’s difficult to state that one surgeon is “right” while the other is “wrong.” There are several variables which could cause this issue and lead to a bit of post-consultation confusion:

First, remember that hair transplant surgery, and medicine in general, is comprised of 50% science and 50% art. Knowing this, it’s easy to understand how two, highly trained surgeons can evaluate your scalp scientifically and still devise two separate restoration plans based on their own experience and preference. It doesn’t mean one is valid or invalid, simply that these two practitioners understand the data, but view the “plan of attack” differently.

Second, the Norwood scale is not necessarily the final decider of your balding pattern and future progression. The scale, while very helpful, is simply a set of guidelines, created to help physicians diagnose and explain the hair loss process to their patients. It’s a generalization, and there is no guarantee that you will perfectly fit a pre-determined mold (especially when it comes to different physician’s interpretations and something as unpredictable as hair loss).

Third, each hair restoration physician may have differing graft placement preferences. For example, two surgeons can look at the same area of balding scalp and set number of follicular units and one could decided to distribute the grafts to the frontal hairline, temple region, and vertex, while the other concentrates all the grafts at a higher density in the frontal hairline. It’s most likely a preference, and the best thing you can do is explain your goals and expectations to your doctor and help create a collaborative treatment plan together.

With regard to what you should do from here: keep researching, consulting with quality surgeons, and don’t commit to a procedure until you are comfortable, informed, and ready to move forward.
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Blake Bloxham – aka Future_HT_Doc

Editorial Assistant and Forum Co-Moderator for the Hair Transplant Network, the Hair Loss Learning Center, the Hair Loss Q&A Blog, and the Hair Restoration Forum

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Technorati Tags: Hair Restoration, hair transplant surgeons, hair restoration physician, Norwood balding scale, hair transplantation, hair transplant surgery, balding pattern, hair loss, hair restoration physician, follicular units, frontal hairline


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Will Injectable, Cell-Based Treatments Cure My Baldness?

Within the last several months, injectable, cell-based hair loss treatments seem to be the most discussed topic in medical hair restoration. Whether it’s a hair stimulating complex, stem cell based therapy, or even clandestine, miracle “compounds,” injectable hair loss therapies are being hailed as baldness cures by patients, rushed to clinical trials by biomedical corporations, and cautiously analyzed by practitioners and dedicated researchers.

Although excellent, detailed analysis has been written on the subject, hair loss sufferers still yearn for two crucial details: 1. Will these products work, and 2. When will they be available for use?

Unfortunately, we simple do not know (yet).

The efficacy of these products is something every individual involved with the field of hair restoration eagerly awaits. Although it’s difficult to generalize, many of these therapies have fallen prey to common research fallacies, such as initial promising data that does not continue during later phases, funding issues, a lack of adherence to scientific research techniques, and conducting insufficient rounds of clinical trials. However, several products have continued demonstrating noticeable results and are conducting advanced research trials as we speak. This type of progress will demonstrate the true initial efficacy (maintenance over a long period of time could become another issue) of these therapies, but unfortunately is not available yet. Additionally, until these products are proven safe and effective, they probably will not be available for commercial usage.

However, knowing that these therapies “could” work and “could” be available within a manageable period does not change the fact that there are certain tools and therapies hair loss patients can utilize today. Preventive medications such as Rogaine (minoxidil) and Propecia (finasteride) are proven, effective, and readily available. Furthermore, these medications would (conceivable) have no effect on the usage of hypothetical, future treatments, meaning they should be investigated now! Also, hair transplant surgery is also an option for appropriate candidates and will not interfere with future techniques. Ideally, one should utilize these proven treatments now and remain cautiously optimistic to future techniques, therapies, and potential cures.

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Blake Bloxham – aka Future_HT_Doc

Editorial Assistant and Forum Co-Moderator for the Hair Transplant Network, the Hair Loss Learning Center, the Hair Loss Q&A Blog, and the Hair Restoration Forum

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Watch hair transplant videos on YouTube

Technorati Tags: hair loss, hair restoration, injectable hair loss therapies, baldness, hair restoration, hair loss patients, Rogaine, minoxidil, Propecia, finasteride, hair transplant surgery


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Are Vitamins and Supplements Effective for Treating Hair Loss?

This question, from a member of the Hair Restoration Social Community and Discussion Forums, was answered by recommended hair restoration physician Dr. William Lindsey:

Which vitamins and supplements are the top ones to help hair growth?

There are lots of anecdotal reports of supplements, shampoos and lasers out there that claim to do wonders for hair loss and most anything else. Before you spend significant money, try to find a controlled study published in a peer reviewed medical journal in the US or Europe  showing that whatever product you are interested in actually has a clinical effect in human beings.

If you can find even one study, then I’d say it’s likely worth a try. If you can’t, ask yourself why. All doctors want to show how great their results are. If a doctor finds something that works, I guarantee you that he wants to be the first to publish it!

I can completely understand balding patients wanting to try things they hear about and avoid or augment medications like Propecia (finasteride) and Rogaine (minoxidil) or hair transplant surgery. All I’m saying is, know what you are spending your hard earned money on.

Dr. William Lindsey – Mclean, VA

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David – aka TakingThePlunge
Assistant Publisher and Forum Co-Moderator for the Hair Transplant Network, the Hair Loss Learning Center, the Hair Loss Q&A Blog, and the Hair Restoration Forum
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Technorati Tags: hair growth, hair loss, balding, Propecia, finasteride, Rogaine, minoxidil, hair transplant


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