PiloFocus: Dr. Carlos Wesley

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  • HairTalk
    replied
    Originally posted by FearTheLoss
    It's already been confirmed that pilofocus will have regeneration. We just don't know what percentage of hairs will regenerate yet. That being said, the treatment will already expland the entire donor area giving you much better results than traditional hair transplantation. Also, the yield is higher.
    It's this sort of mindless blowhard claim-laying that leads to the baseless raising of expectations, followed by the inevitable deflation of spirits.

    It has not "been confirmed that PiloFocus will have regeneration." Dr. Wesley states he is interested in exploring the potential for hair multiplication in piloscopic transplant surgery, but, as of early June, 2014, we have not been presented with any data in this regard.

    It also is absurd to boast piloscopy will "[expand] the entire donor area[,] giving [...] much better results than traditional hair transplantation." On what evidence could you possibly make this statement?

    Piloscopy is novel and it is exciting. It's creative, and I think we would be right to feel enthusiastic about it. We should be enthusiastic, however, about what it is, and not be fanciful about desires we have from it. Piloscopic transplantation likely will permit scar-free donor areas. That's great, and that's what we should feel glad about, right now.

    Originally posted by fred970
    I'm sorry FearTheLoss, but this is just a lie. Donor regeneration is still science-fiction.

    FUE is 15 years old and is the current gold standard for a reason.

    14 years left before pilofocus reach that status. I would have done it in a decade. Jumping on it once it's available for the public would be a mistake in my opinion.

    [...]

    Who knows what the long-term (and even short-term) downsides of this technique are.
    I favor your conservative approach. Just as things can seem great on paper, but not translate into clinical results, clinical results that are new and interesting can carry with themselves unforeseen and undesirable consequences.

    Personally, if piloscopy catches on, I think it can do so within three to five years. Also, personally, observing the principle behind the approach, I don't believe it will entail a lot of unforeseen danger — but, hey, again, also in my opinion, conservative is a respectable position to assume.

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  • ss1980
    replied
    This Pilofocus is taking waay too long, it was supposed to be on the market at the end of last year and now we are half way through 2014 and still nothing.

    FUE still rules

    Leave a comment:


  • fred970
    replied
    I'm sorry FearTheLoss, but this is just a lie. Donor regeneration is still science-fiction.

    FUE is 15 years old and is the current gold standard for a reason.

    14 years left before pilofocus reach that status. I would have done it in a decade. Jumping on it once it's available for the public would be a mistake in my opinion.

    Just like doing LASIK in the 90's would have been a mistake, as we know now that the flap never heals and a bump in your eyes can damage it and leave you screwed for life. That's why I got PRK for my myopia in 2011, and that's why I just had a FUE. Security.

    Who knows what the long-term (and even short-term) downsides of this technique are.

    Leave a comment:


  • Seuxin
    replied
    And when it will be available ? Two years ? Ten years ? And where ? Only in the US ?

    Leave a comment:


  • FearTheLoss
    replied
    It's already been confirmed that pilofocus will have regeneration. We just don't know what percentage of hairs will regenerate yet. That being said, the treatment will already expland the entire donor area giving you much better results than traditional hair transplantation. Also, the yield is higher.

    Leave a comment:


  • kobefan234
    replied
    Originally posted by hellouser
    If its scarless, what will be pretty cool is the fact that you'll be able to strip the entire hairline from ear to ear giving you a SIGNIFICANT amount of grafts to implant anywhere else. I'd be fine with a receding hairline around the back, but obviously NOT the front. Perhaps this would finally enable us to get to full coverage at slightly lower density?
    what kind of haircut would be applicable ?

    Leave a comment:


  • hellouser
    replied
    If its scarless, what will be pretty cool is the fact that you'll be able to strip the entire hairline from ear to ear giving you a SIGNIFICANT amount of grafts to implant anywhere else. I'd be fine with a receding hairline around the back, but obviously NOT the front. Perhaps this would finally enable us to get to full coverage at slightly lower density?

    Leave a comment:


  • HairTalk
    started a topic PiloFocus: Dr. Carlos Wesley

    PiloFocus: Dr. Carlos Wesley

    I've been a member of this forum on TheBaldTruth.com for a few years, as of 2014, and I've never bothered to comment hopefully on hairloss research. Not Aderans, Histogen, TrichoScience, bimatoprost, ACell, P.R.P. — nothing. Some concepts have sounded interesting, but nothing's been substantial enough over which to become seriously excited.

    Dr. Carlos Wesley's PiloFocus technique, to me, seems like the next significant move forward in the treatment of hairloss. I do not know whether it will succeed in expanding donor supply, but I feel enthusiastic and hopeful about its potential — literally within the next year — to deliver scar-free transplantation (scar-free in the donor area, not including a single minor, non-hypopigmented linear scar, ~one centimeter long).

    I think it also might help pioneer techniques that do increase donor supply, but I would not bait my breath over this. Overcoming donor scarring, however, is not small feat, and I commend Dr. Wesley for his inventive and effective approach.

    A link to more information, including an honest and detailed video:
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