Importance of Going Conservative with the Hairline

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  • 35YrsAfter
    Doctor Representative
    • Aug 2012
    • 1421

    Importance of Going Conservative with the Hairline

    When I first began working at Dr. Cole's office, it seemed every other patient was in for repair surgery of one type or another. These pictures provide a good example of why young men should resist the temptation of having a low hairline grafted in. The photo itself pretty much tells the story. A young man receives a low hairline that may very well look natural at first. As hair loss progresses, an unnatural appearing band of hair remains across the forehead. Fortunately for this patient, with longer hair and styling, he was able to conceal this band of hair. Realizing those days were numbered, he came to us for repair surgery. This is not an easy fix, so the best advice I can give is go conservative with the hairline.

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  • mattj
    Doctor Representative
    • Oct 2009
    • 1422

    #2
    From the looks of it he hasn't progressed past the point where he couldn't have the balding area restored to a high standard. I agree that the hairline looks too low and also badly shaped at the temples.
    I am a patient and representative of Dr Rahal

    My FUE With Dr Rahal - Awesome Hairline Result

    I can be contacted for advice: matt@rahalhairline.com

    Comment

    • gillenator
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2008
      • 1417

      #3
      Did this patient by chance also have a scalp reduction in his past?

      Also, was removing some of the lower hairline grafts considered?

      Hopefully this patient can have more work to help transition his frontal zone.

      Best wishes to him and I could not agree more with a more conservative placement of any hairline.
      "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

      • win200
        Senior Member
        • Jul 2012
        • 420

        #4
        Originally posted by gillenator
        Did this patient by chance also have a scalp reduction in his past?

        Also, was removing some of the lower hairline grafts considered?

        Hopefully this patient can have more work to help transition his frontal zone.

        Best wishes to him and I could not agree more with a more conservative placement of any hairline.
        Is removing hairline grafts possible without creating conspicuous scarring? I recently had a hairline procedure that's relatively low in the middle (sort of a prominent widow's peak), and I'm concerned about recession over the long-term.

        Comment

        • gillenator
          Senior Member
          • Dec 2008
          • 1417

          #5
          win200,

          Yes, it is possible to have some of the lower hairline grafts extracted with FUE without much visible scarring at all. It really depends on how well you heal, and if the punches are appropriate sizes. If a patient tends to heal with more visible scarring, than it's also possible to have those unwanted grafts "destroyed" with electroalysis.

          The extracted FUE grafts could be potentially relocated within the recipient area and the repair patgient that was previewed can use all the grafts he can since he still could use more visual coverage in the frontal zone.

          Before FUE, or surgeons who do repair work and do not perform FUE can only excise the unwanted grafts using incisions and even then can be a big improvement especially when the area being thinned out still has exisitng hair left behind to help with visual coverage.
          "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

          • win200
            Senior Member
            • Jul 2012
            • 420

            #6
            Originally posted by gillenator
            win200,

            Yes, it is possible to have some of the lower hairline grafts extracted with FUE without much visible scarring at all. It really depends on how well you heal, and if the punches are appropriate sizes. If a patient tends to heal with more visible scarring, than it's also possible to have those unwanted grafts "destroyed" with electroalysis.

            The extracted FUE grafts could be potentially relocated within the recipient area and the repair patgient that was previewed can use all the grafts he can since he still could use more visual coverage in the frontal zone.

            Before FUE, or surgeons who do repair work and do not perform FUE can only excise the unwanted grafts using incisions and even then can be a big improvement especially when the area being thinned out still has exisitng hair left behind to help with visual coverage.
            Great, thanks for the tip. My hairline looks great now, but I'm concerned about years down the line (I'm 30).

            Comment

            • 35YrsAfter
              Doctor Representative
              • Aug 2012
              • 1421

              #7
              gillenator:
              "Did this patient by chance also have a scalp reduction in his past?"

              To my knowledge, this patient did not have a scalp reduction. The photo suggests that, but it's just his natural hair loss pattern.

              After these pre-op photos were taken, the patient had the grafts down on his forehead removed and placed higher. Additional grafts were taken from his donor area to reinforce and add density to the new higher hairline and to help conceal his strip scar.

              He's about 2 months post-op. He lives some distance from our office and hopefully he will send us some photos at the 8 month mark.

              -34YrsAfter works at Dr. Cole's office

              Comment

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