+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 13
  1. #1
    Senior Member jman91's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Posts
    237

    Question Botched Transplant

    Ok, at the risk of sounding very naive, I have got ask is it really that hard to fix a bad transplant?

    When spencer says to be cautious etc of getting a ht as it may not turn out right made me go through a load pictures of fail transplants and it left me thinking could you not just get the hair lazered off if it looked bad? or even just wax the transplanted hairs like people wax their body hairs of on a regular basis?

  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Posts
    831

    Default

    I think Spencer's main point(Not 100% sure about this), is that once your cut, you're cut...

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Posts
    437

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jman91 View Post
    Ok, at the risk of sounding very naive, I have got ask is it really that hard to fix a bad transplant?

    When spencer says to be cautious etc of getting a ht as it may not turn out right made me go through a load pictures of fail transplants and it left me thinking could you not just get the hair lazered off if it looked bad? or even just wax the transplanted hairs like people wax their body hairs of on a regular basis?
    Before HT, specially strip which is still called the "gold standard" by many ppl, you have the option to shave your head which still looks much better than typical horseshoes or comb over but once you cut there is no turning back even if you lazer or wax the transplanted hair what you gonna do about the scar on the back of your head ? U'll end up stuck with the horseshoes look just to cover the scar.

  4. #4
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    341

    Default

    botched transplants are more common than people realise . Part of the problem is some patients feel intimidated if they get a botched result , very few post and those that do get others banging on about there great transplant with the same Dr, which is totally irrelevent to the person with the botch job !! , this combined with Dr using legal means to silence patients makes it hard to find who is less likely to botch your head than others

    I think your view on repair is massively misguided , if only you could shave it off and forget about it , that for many would be a luxury , in fact the only way you could pull that off would be with a fue session with a small manual extraction punch in the hands of a great Dr , and grafted 2 inches or so behind the hairline into the frontal forelock , for many fue with the wrong size punch is just as damaging as poor strip scars , you have to take into account the cost of several repairs, and if your lucky enough to have the donor available, just to get back to the position you were in before you started down the transplant route

    hope this helps

    ejj

  5. #5
    Senior Member jman91's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2012
    Posts
    237

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ejj View Post
    botched transplants are more common than people realise . Part of the problem is some patients feel intimidated if they get a botched result , very few post and those that do get others banging on about there great transplant with the same Dr, which is totally irrelevent to the person with the botch job !! , this combined with Dr using legal means to silence patients makes it hard to find who is less likely to botch your head than others
    ejj
    That's really interesting you should say that. I was thinking that there has to more going on then what you're lead to believe. From the looks of it IAHRS patients are happy with the result 99% of the time. But what gets me is the fact that Spencer himself refuses to get a transplant out of fear something could go wrong, even though with his knowledge and respect in the industry he could find the most skilled physician and they would do their best work on him, probably for free.

    There must be a much higher risk of stuff going wrong if he doesn't want to because he surely knows he could easily be resorted to a NW1 with great coverage if he got a ht, so it says a lot that he refuses temptation and refuses to get one just in case something goes wrong.

    Maybe it's for legal reasons he cant talk more about the dangers of HT's and go into detail about what could go wrong. I also think its a possibility that IAHRS doctors sometimes mess up and spencer, although not hiding this maliciously, doesnt want to specifically make a point that these doctors do bad work once in a while as people might interpret it the wrong way and think the IAHRS isn't trusted.

  6. #6
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    1,398

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jman91 View Post
    That's really interesting you should say that. I was thinking that there has to more going on then what you're lead to believe. From the looks of it IAHRS patients are happy with the result 99% of the time. But what gets me is the fact that Spencer himself refuses to get a transplant out of fear something could go wrong, even though with his knowledge and respect in the industry he could find the most skilled physician and they would do their best work on him, probably for free.

    There must be a much higher risk of stuff going wrong if he doesn't want to because he surely knows he could easily be resorted to a NW1 with great coverage if he got a ht, so it says a lot that he refuses temptation and refuses to get one just in case something goes wrong.

    Maybe it's for legal reasons he cant talk more about the dangers of HT's and go into detail about what could go wrong. I also think its a possibility that IAHRS doctors sometimes mess up and spencer, although not hiding this maliciously, doesnt want to specifically make a point that these doctors do bad work once in a while as people might interpret it the wrong way and think the IAHRS isn't trusted.

    some people find it too invasive...

  7. #7
    Member
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Toronto, Canada
    Posts
    32

    Default

    Spencer cautions and makes ppl aware that even if you go to the best of the best there is always a risk, although less of one when you use an IAHRS. If you have that fear then you are likely not ready for one. Consider a system first and see how you feel or if it can buy you some time. There are a lot of things in the works and if you can buy yourself some time you my never need to worry about being cut. Personally, I couldnt wait because I wanted to enjoy hair now when I'm younger and was welling to take the risk. Again there are also no gaurentees that these future treatments will come to forition. I didn't get a botch job, but definitely not the best job either. I learned a lot after finding this site and have made what I beleive are more informed decisions about my upcoming second procedure which is a bit of a fix job and working further back.
    As for Spencer not getting an HT, I don't beleive it has anything to do with what was mentioned above. I think it has more to do with risk and benefit based on where he's at with hair loss and age. He's probably concern of shock loss and more so, he's 47 and has a pretty decent amount of hair. If I had what he had I'd be satisfied instead of greedy and taking a risk. Just my thoughts.

  8. #8
    Senior Member PayDay's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    New York
    Posts
    604

    Default

    I think Spencer is just comfortable with himself at this point of his life. His hair looks really good and he doesn't seem to mind using dermmatch to cover the back. He won the battle as far as I'm concerned on couple of fronts. He was able to save a good amount of hair and he has the guts to tell the world that he wears makeup on his head and somehow he is even able to look cool doing it.

    He's always been the first to say to hold off surgery for as long as you can and if you can't deal with a possible bad outcome, not to have it at all. He also says all the time that even IAHRS surgeons have unhappy patients.

    It's no secret that he thinks HT surgery is a big step that has to be fully thought through before having it.

  9. #9
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Posts
    402

    Default

    I'm curious about what exactly a "botched job" constitutes--poor growth? Bad placement? I'm 11 weeks from my surgery, and going through all the usual anxiety. I know that there are unhappy patients, but I'm not clear on what type of outcomes they're getting that leave them unhappy.

  10. #10
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    341

    Default

    being left with a donor area that looks like " freddy krueger , on an off day " extracted the strip left me unhappy

    regards

    ejj

Similar Threads

  1. Botched Hair Transplant Makes The Irish Times
    By tbtadmin in forum Hair Transplant: Start Your Own Topic
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 07-14-2009, 11:59 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

» IAHRS

hair transplant surgeons

» The Bald Truth

» Recent Threads

Benefits of Resveratrol for hair and health
05-05-2022 01:46 AM
Last Post By felixten
Yesterday 11:59 PM
1800 graft repair case results by Dr. Lindsey
03-27-2024 08:38 AM
Last Post By Dr. Lindsey
03-27-2024 08:38 AM
Navigating the German Job Market as a Kenyan Citizen
11-04-2023 06:31 AM
Last Post By Keegan212
03-27-2024 03:51 AM