Aderans
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No they take a strip of skin with hair follicles, cultivate the follicle in a lab (essentially multiplying the # of follicles) and than transplant it into the scalp.Comment
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The acquisition of Bosley is a safe bet that will not be for hair transplants but used as locations/facilities to execute their procedure. Of course, I'm sure hair transplants will still be an option for others. I expect the price of hair transplants to drop in price once Aderans DOES get their product out for consumers.Comment
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Sh#t, I was thinking buzzing my head, at least the sides and the back, when hair multiplication became available. Another one down the drain. Guess there's little hope for those who like to buzz it?Comment
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During this process, often called hair multiplication or hair cloning, a small piece of tissue is removed from the neckline. Cells are cultivated in controlled conditions where they are encouraged to multiply by the addition of proprietary growth media. When enough new cells are formed, they are returned to the scalp, where they are injected and elicit new hair growth and thickness, ultimately producing more hair than the client had before.Comment
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No, they don't:
Injecting newly-formed cells into the scalp to produce hair growth is not a form of "transplant."Comment
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