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  • mrnelson1970
    Junior Member
    • Jul 2009
    • 8

    need answers

    hello
    is it true or false that curly hair is harder on a HT then stright? should i look into a doctor that deals with curly hair HT? does anyone know is there a difference between cury or stright HT?
    thanks nelson the bald guy
  • Spex
    Dr Representative
    • Nov 2008
    • 4289

    #2
    I honestly don't believe so as the majority of the shaft is shaved down anyway. It certainly gives for great coverage and is a great HT characteristic

    All good HT clinics will have a variety of curly hair patients to show you - There are several around on the net also.

    All the best

    Hair characteristics

    Hair characteristics play a vital role in the overall illusion and success of a HT. Some patients have more favourable hair characteristics and therefore need less grafts to gain their personal goal. Someone with fine, straight, thin hair is going to require more grafts to achieve a similar result than for example someone with coarse, wavy, thick hair.

    Remember Hair transplantation is the "art of illusion". With the appropriate placement and use of your hairs characteristic the illusion can be achieved very well - the more favourable your hair characteristic is ie; wavy, thick hair means the illusion can occur with fewer grafts if positioned correctly.

    Our hairs characteristics all vary but be aware of your own when embarking into HT's and how it can aid or not aid the illusion. In brief - Patients with very similar loss patterns may not have the same hair characteristic. Therefore they will require a different amount of grafts to achieve a similar result in terms of illusion, coverage, density.

    Hair transplants are all about the art of illusion ;-)
    Visit my website: SPEXHAIR

    Watch regular segments and interviews on The Bald Truth UK show

    View Media interviews www.spexhair.media

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    I am not a doctor or medical professional and my words should not be taken as medical advice. All opinions expressed are my own unless stated otherwise. Always consult with your own family doctor prior to embarking on any form of hair loss treatment or surgery.

    Comment

    • Mark Baxa, MD
      Junior Member
      • Mar 2009
      • 16

      #3
      mrnelson1970

      Hello ...... I would agree with what was written by 'spex'.
      Curly hair can provide great coverage after the transplant and in reference to the actually dissection of the follicles, it can only be deteremined at the time of the procedure, if the follicular shaft will be curly under the skin. But with a good surgery team, this is usually not an issue.
      We deal with this all the time.

      Best Regards,

      Mark D. Baxa, MD

      Comment

      • gillenator
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2008
        • 1417

        #4
        Here's the deal. It all depends on whether we are talking about strip or FUE. You better believe it makes a huge difference with FUE! With FUE, curly hair can present an entirely different situation during the extraction process. There is more risk in transection with extracting curly hair because the surgeon cannot see into the dermis layer of tissue. Curly hair can protrude at many different angles compared to straight hair.

        With strip, the tissue specimen is excised. There are no individual extractions that you have with FUE. And the inner dermis layer is clearly visible to the techs doing the microscopic dissection.

        IMHO, a patient with curly hair characteristics would be the HT surgeon's worst nightmare IF he/she is learning the extraction process and new at FUE.

        That's why anyone with curly hair considering FUE better do their homework real well and insist on choosing a FUE doc who has lots of experience with curly haired patients AND the proven yields to support it. Don't just take their word for it.

        Otherwise you may end up with a doc who will elect to use punches with 1mm plus sizes and then you could end up with visible scarring from those monstrous sized punches.
        "Gillenator"
        Independent Patient Advocate
        more.hair@verizon.net

        NOTE: I am not a physician and not employed by any doctor/clinic. My opinions are not medical advice nor are they the opinions of the following endorsing physicians: Dr. Bob True & Dr. Bob Dorin

        Comment

        • Mark Baxa, MD
          Junior Member
          • Mar 2009
          • 16

          #5
          Curly hair - Reference comments from Gillenator

          The comments post by 'Gillenator' are pretty much on the money. I would never attempt the FUE method on patients with curly hair for that exact reason .... The yield of viable follicles is definitely to low.

          I could not have written it better .... Then the comments posted by Gillenator'.

          Best Regards,

          Mark D. Baxa, MD

          Comment

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