Hair Transplant Minimum Age

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  • 35YrsAfter
    Doctor Representative
    • Aug 2012
    • 1418

    #16
    Originally posted by Mike K
    This looks absolutely horrible. If I was that guy I would shave my head. But he probably can't, because of his hair transplant scars.
    From a distance the top looks pluggy. The white hair helps and this is more common than you think. It happened to me, it sucks and Mike K hurt my feelings.

    Fortunately it's fixable, but takes a lot of work.

    35YrsAfter also posts as CITNews and works at Dr. Cole's office
    forhair.com
    Cole Hair Transplant
    1070 Powers Place
    Alpharetta, Georgia 30009
    Phone 678-566-1011
    email 35YrsAfter at chuck@forhair.com
    The contents of my posts are my opinions and not medical advice
    Please feel free to call or email me with any questions. Ask for Chuck

    Comment

    • Mike K
      Senior Member
      • Apr 2012
      • 198

      #17
      Originally posted by 35YrsAfter
      From a distance the top looks pluggy. The white hair helps and this is more common than you think. It happened to me, it sucks and Mike K hurt my feelings.

      Fortunately it's fixable, but takes a lot of work.

      35YrsAfter also posts as CITNews and works at Dr. Cole's office
      forhair.com
      Cole Hair Transplant
      1070 Powers Place
      Alpharetta, Georgia 30009
      Phone 678-566-1011
      email 35YrsAfter at chuck@forhair.com
      The contents of my posts are my opinions and not medical advice
      Please feel free to call or email me with any questions. Ask for Chuck
      Sorry to hurt your feelings I'm sorry that happened to you. How fixable is this really? Can the grafts be moved so that he has thin, overall coverage? Or is the only solution to laser off the grafts and look like a normal NW7?

      Also, this is worst case scenario right? And this is fixable? So why not get a HT young?

      Comment

      • ryan555
        Senior Member
        • Oct 2010
        • 428

        #18
        It really doesn't seem fair that the guys who need it the most (young men with severe hair loss) are the worst candidates for surgery. I do believe that technology and future treatments will help deal with the situation so that men in their 20's now will not have to live out their entire lives as bald men. But as for a timeline, who the hell knows. I still think it's best to assume that treatments will continue to be limited and anything else will be a pleasant surprise.

        Comment

        • 35YrsAfter
          Doctor Representative
          • Aug 2012
          • 1418

          #19
          Originally posted by Mike K
          Sorry to hurt your feelings I'm sorry that happened to you. How fixable is this really? Can the grafts be moved so that he has thin, overall coverage? Or is the only solution to laser off the grafts and look like a normal NW7?

          Also, this is worst case scenario right? And this is fixable? So why not get a HT young?
          By looking at the photo, this man looks like he had the legacy plug surgery. The name of an appropriate repair surgery is called "Plug Redistribution". We are in fact doing one today as I type. The grafts are divided into singles and moved to provide a natural appearance. Another repair approach is one of grafting around the plugs. This is only doable if the usual plug shrinkage isn't too severe, causing extreme hair density in the shrunken graft.

          We had a patient several years ago who went to one of the chain stores and had rows of plugs placed forming a couple of V shapes on his crown. As he grew older, he lost all of the surrounding hair and became a Norwood 6. He used to shave the plugs down every morning before work and use makeup to cover the dark hair stubble. After several years of doing this, he accepted his baldness and had Dr. Cole remove the plugs and stitch up the extraction sites. So yes there are several ways of dealing with unsatisfactory work.

          The VP is a public example of reasonably successful repair work.

          35YrsAfter also posts as CITNews and works at Dr. Cole's office
          forhair.com
          Cole Hair Transplant
          1070 Powers Place
          Alpharetta, Georgia 30009
          Phone 678-566-1011
          email 35YrsAfter at chuck@forhair.com
          The contents of my posts are my opinions and not medical advice
          Please feel free to call or email me with any questions. Ask for Chuck

          Comment

          • J_B_Davis
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2008
            • 393

            #20
            If you're losing your hair at a very young age getting a hair transplant early on is a big mistake. There is a reason why the good surgeons seldom operate on very young guys.

            Comment

            • fred970
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2009
              • 922

              #21
              The reason is because they can't have a before/after they can show off on their website like with the NW3 to NW1 cases? If potential see cases who are half-restored, they'll go like "but he's still baaald!". I would dream to have the front-half of my NW5 restored.

              I started losing hair at 17 and am now a 24 years old NW5. I will get a 2000 grafts FUE to recover the appearance of my original NW2 hairline to frame my face so I'll be able to live the rest of my youth (and the rest of my life) with a certain peace of mind.

              I will continue to shave my head after the procedure. I would shave my head even if I had a full head of hair. I don't care about the trends here, what people think in general in the hair loss world. I don't want a Beatles haircut, I don't want hair parted down the middle. I don't want to have hair on my crown, who cares about the crown? You don't even see it in the mirror. People who are slick bald at the crown like Kevin Smith still look very good and look like they have a full head of hair. I don't care about the white dot scarring, I'm very pale and I almost don't scar, plus no one's looking at the back of my head. I don't care about becoming a NW7, my father and his father and the father of my mother are NW5, so it's impossible anyway.

              Sorry, I recently lost my precious frame, or what was left of it, and I'm very angry when I look at the pictures of my last holidays:



              I told myself I would have my FUE in time to avoid experiencing the pain I'm feeling now. But now I'll have to wait until my FUE is scheduled again and wait for it to grow to get that frame back. I don't mind being shaved, but a frame at the front changes EVERYTHING.

              Guys here are of very good advice, I know I'm good looking despite the baldness and all that, but at the end of the day, it's down to what you want, and I want a frame for my face, and the only way to get it back is a FUE. SMP is impossible because of my hair colour apparently. I hate what I see in the mirror right now, and all the compensation in any area of my life is not going to change that.

              I need to take real action. So here I go to make this "big mistake".

              Comment

              • ryan555
                Senior Member
                • Oct 2010
                • 428

                #22
                Originally posted by fred970
                The reason is because they can't have a before/after they can show off on their website like with the NW3 to NW1 cases? If potential see cases who are half-restored, they'll go like "but he's still baaald!". I would dream to have the front-half of my NW5 restored.

                I started losing hair at 17 and am now a 24 years old NW5. I will get a 2000 grafts FUE to recover the appearance of my original NW2 hairline to frame my face so I'll be able to live the rest of my youth (and the rest of my life) with a certain peace of mind.

                I will continue to shave my head after the procedure. I would shave my head even if I had a full head of hair. I don't care about the trends here, what people think in general in the hair loss world. I don't want a Beatles haircut, I don't want hair parted down the middle. I don't want to have hair on my crown, who cares about the crown? You don't even see it in the mirror. People who are slick bald at the crown like Kevin Smith still look very good and look like they have a full head of hair. I don't care about the white dot scarring, I'm very pale and I almost don't scar, plus no one's looking at the back of my head. I don't care about becoming a NW7, my father and his father and the father of my mother are NW5, so it's impossible anyway.

                Sorry, I recently lost my precious frame, or what was left of it, and I'm very angry when I look at the pictures of my last holidays:



                I told myself I would have my FUE in time to avoid experiencing the pain I'm feeling now. But now I'll have to wait until my FUE is scheduled again and wait for it to grow to get that frame back. I don't mind being shaved, but a frame at the front changes EVERYTHING.

                Guys here are of very good advice, I know I'm good looking despite the baldness and all that, but at the end of the day, it's down to what you want, and I want a frame for my face, and the only way to get it back is a FUE. SMP is impossible because of my hair colour apparently. I hate what I see in the mirror right now, and all the compensation in any area of my life is not going to change that.

                I need to take real action. So here I go to make this "big mistake".
                As long as your expectations are realistic you'll probably do well. It helps a lot that you don't care about the crown so much - that will save you a ton of donor. Going very conservative on the hairline (like a high NW2) will also help a lot. Also, if there is one bright spot in this for you, your hair characteristics will make a big difference. Being so blonde, if you buzz that down short you won't need a lot of density for a natural look. Of course, if they figure out this hair cloning thing, you can always go back down the road and get a complete restoration. Just make sure that whatever you do, go to a really good surgeon and don't let price dictate your decision.

                Did they give you any indication of how many total grafts they could get from your donor?

                Comment

                • fred970
                  Senior Member
                  • Nov 2009
                  • 922

                  #23
                  Thanks for your comment ryan :-). I've seen two top surgeons: one told me up to 4500 grafts and the other up to 2500 grafts, so I guess the truth must be somewhere in the middle. I have low density (37 hairs per cm&#178 with a NW2 hair line. Before hair loss, I already had a very high forehead that looked like a NW2 anyway.

                  Yeah I know, people have already told me: "but you're very blonde, it's hard to tell if you're balding because of that." I heard Spencer talking about the contrast between hair and scalp and how people with very dark hair make worse candidates.

                  What I say is that people should stop assuming everyone who is young and bald like me all want to get a Brad Pitt hair line and grow their hair out like him in Legends of the Fall.

                  Right know I'm just scared about infection or folliculitis. Not even shock loss, because with my hairstyle, I don't think it would even be visible.

                  Comment

                  • 35YrsAfter
                    Doctor Representative
                    • Aug 2012
                    • 1418

                    #24
                    Originally posted by ryan555
                    As long as your expectations are realistic you'll probably do well. It helps a lot that you don't care about the crown so much - that will save you a ton of donor. Going very conservative on the hairline (like a high NW2) will also help a lot. Also, if there is one bright spot in this for you, your hair characteristics will make a big difference. Being so blonde, if you buzz that down short you won't need a lot of density for a natural look. Of course, if they figure out this hair cloning thing, you can always go back down the road and get a complete restoration. Just make sure that whatever you do, go to a really good surgeon and don't let price dictate your decision.

                    Did they give you any indication of how many total grafts they could get from your donor?
                    ryan555:
                    Please take my advice and ask that "singles" be placed in your recipient area. Your hair offers a perfect example of what could become a huge disappointment for you down the road should you get multiple hair follicular units placed on top. They really stand out and T shirts advertising hair transplant doctors have never been popular. You don't want to advertise to the world you had a hair transplant.
                    Last edited by 35YrsAfter; 02-22-2015, 06:33 PM.

                    Comment

                    • ryan555
                      Senior Member
                      • Oct 2010
                      • 428

                      #25
                      Originally posted by 35YrsAfter
                      ryan555:
                      Please take my advice and ask that "singles" be placed in your recipient area. Your hair offers a perfect example of what could become a huge disappointment for you down the road should you get multiple hair follicular units placed on top. They really stand out and T shirts advertising hair transplant doctors have never been popular. You don't want to advertise to the world you had a hair transplant.

                      35YrsAfter also posts as CITNews and works at Dr. Cole's office
                      forhair.com
                      Cole Hair Transplant
                      1070 Powers Place
                      Alpharetta, Georgia 30009
                      Phone 678-566-1011
                      email 35YrsAfter at chuck@forhair.com
                      The contents of my posts are my opinions and not medical advice
                      Please feel free to call or email me with any questions. Ask for Chuck
                      Noted, but Fred is the one preparing for a HT, not me.

                      Comment

                      • ryan555
                        Senior Member
                        • Oct 2010
                        • 428

                        #26
                        Originally posted by 35YrsAfter
                        ryan555:
                        Please take my advice and ask that "singles" be placed in your recipient area. Your hair offers a perfect example of what could become a huge disappointment for you down the road should you get multiple hair follicular units placed on top. They really stand out and T shirts advertising hair transplant doctors have never been popular. You don't want to advertise to the world you had a hair transplant.

                        35YrsAfter also posts as CITNews and works at Dr. Cole's office
                        forhair.com
                        Cole Hair Transplant
                        1070 Powers Place
                        Alpharetta, Georgia 30009
                        Phone 678-566-1011
                        email 35YrsAfter at chuck@forhair.com
                        The contents of my posts are my opinions and not medical advice
                        Please feel free to call or email me with any questions. Ask for Chuck

                        While we are on the subject, though, I have question regarding hairline restoration. Due to a very bad decision in my youth, I have a strip scar on the back of my head and some minor white scarring where my old hairline grafts used to be before Dr Cole removed them. The rest of my hair is quite thick as of now, but due to the scarring I am contemplating a minor hairline restoration. Since I already have a strip scar, I was going to undergo another small strip procedure with Ron Shapiro or another great FUT doc, but would it be inappropriate to do so since they'd be taking multi hair grafts in addition to singles? In other words, since I only need work done in about the first centimeter of my hairline, would it be required to use FUE so that only singles could be harvested? I never thought about how multis might look that close to my hairline edge.

                        Comment

                        • 35YrsAfter
                          Doctor Representative
                          • Aug 2012
                          • 1418

                          #27
                          Originally posted by ryan555
                          Noted, but Fred is the one preparing for a HT, not me.
                          Sorry ryan555

                          Chuck

                          Comment

                          • 35YrsAfter
                            Doctor Representative
                            • Aug 2012
                            • 1418

                            #28
                            Originally posted by ryan555
                            would it be inappropriate to do so since they'd be taking multi hair grafts in addition to singles? In other words, since I only need work done in about the first centimeter of my hairline, would it be required to use FUE so that only singles could be harvested?
                            ryan555:

                            No, you would be fine. The techs will cut the strip into singles. A top doc doesn't need to be told that, but it certainly doesn't hurt to mention that's what you want. Multiple hair grafts should always be avoided on the hairline as well as near the hairline. They never look natural.

                            Chuck

                            Comment

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