5485 Grafts! (More than 10,620 Hairs!) Thank You Dr Wong!

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  • Red20
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2008
    • 100

    5485 Grafts! (More than 10,620 Hairs!) Thank You Dr Wong!

    I had my hair transplant surgery with Dr Wong on May 14 and I am one happy man.

    I am a significant Norwood 6 and was praying that Dr Wong would be able to get as many hairs as possible.

    Mike Ferko picked me up at the airport and took me to the Hasson and Wong Clinic. I met Joe, Doug, Dr Hasson, and Dr Wong. All very nice guys and fun to talk to. Dr Wong is more demure and Dr Hasson is more gregarious. I think they are a good counter-balance for each other.

    Joe and Doug both made me feel comfortable when I got there.

    I would like to tell Mike Ferko "THANK YOU" for doing a great job at presenting the facts and asking ME to do my homework before choosing a clinic, and I'm glad I did.

    Mike was alot of fun to hang out with. He is a very outgoing guy, with a fantastic sense of humor, who makes you feel comfortable immediately.


    Dr Wong said I had great donor Density and average laxity except for one side. On my left side he was able to get 2.0 cm strip. In middle and right side he got 1.6 cm strips.


    Before we had a definite graft count Dr Wong went about half way back on the scalp. When we found out he got 5485 grafts he went back farther into the crown, which was a BONUS.





    Dr Wong is such a nice and humble guy you would never know what a pioneer this guy is(The creator of Lateral Slit Incision!).

    It also took Dr Wong almost 2 hours to get my donor completed. Dr Wong uses a SINGLE BLADE to extract the donor site. I urge everyone to educate themselves on what kind of blade a hair tranpslant surgeon uses for the donor extraction.


    Thank You Dr Wong!

    Here are my before, during, and after hair transplant photos:
    Attached Files
  • TeeJay73
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2008
    • 238

    #2
    Congratulations man.....The Hasson & Wong guys are phenomenal. No doubt you will be very happy when the hair grows in.

    Comment

    • Tsakalos
      Junior Member
      • May 2009
      • 20

      #3
      5485 in one pass. that should work well man. congrafts. are u planning doing the crown too ?

      btw the last 5 years or so i havent heard anyone not using a single blade scalpel for cutting out the strip.

      Comment

      • comb
        Junior Member
        • May 2009
        • 18

        #4
        Congratulations for an excellent HT as always done by Dr Wong! Grow well!

        Comment

        • bigmac
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2008
          • 253

          #5
          Work and placement looks great.

          Sure to produce a very good result for you.

          Now just the waiting game which will soon pass.

          Heal and grow well.

          Comment

          • Red20
            Senior Member
            • Dec 2008
            • 100

            #6
            We checked into our hotel and we have an internet connection. I wanted to make a quick reply.


            Thanks TeeJay, Comb, and BigMac for your nice comments!


            Tsakalos,

            I plan on having at least 1 more surgery. I would like to have crown work done the second surgery and the hairline lowered slightly.


            How dense we make the crown will depend on how many grafts Dr Wong is able to extract.


            There are still Hair Transplant Surgeons using a double blade scalpel.
            That's why I urge everyone to educate themselves before choosing a Hair Transplant Dr.

            Comment

            • TeeJay73
              Senior Member
              • Oct 2008
              • 238

              #7
              So what exactly are the advantages of using a single blade? And what are the disadvantages of using other types of blades? Don't all IAHRS surgeons use single blades, if that is state of the art?

              Comment

              • Red20
                Senior Member
                • Dec 2008
                • 100

                #8
                Originally posted by TeeJay73
                So what exactly are the advantages of using a single blade? And what are the disadvantages of using other types of blades? Don't all IAHRS surgeons use single blades, if that is state of the art?

                Not all clinics are using single blade scalpels.


                The #1 advantage to a single blade scalpel is less graft "transection" (Cutting and ruining grafts). Obviously, this allows the hair transplant surgeon to get the maximum amount of donor grafts.

                The disadvantage is it takes more time and a hair transplant surgeon needs to be highly skilled. Dr Wong will actually adjust the size of the donor strip according to the laxity in different areas of the strip. You can't do this with a multi-blade scalpel.



                The benefits of a multi-blade scalpel is it's faster and easier fo the surgeon to close the donor incision.


                The negative of a multi-blade is more transection of grafts occurs, which lowers your graft yield.


                I remember reading that it is estimated that transection rates of 30% occur with mutli-blade scalpels. So for every 1000 grafts 300 of those are lost to transection.

                So if a donor has a potential amount of 3900 grafts you would lose 900 grafts due to transection by a multi-blade scalpel. 900 grafts are alot of grafts to lose!

                For a person, like myself, who needs every dang graft that is a devastating amount of grafts to lose.


                I will do a search for the article, I read this on, and post it for you to read.

                Comment

                • PayDay
                  Senior Member
                  • Nov 2008
                  • 604

                  #9
                  Looks like a great hair transplant so far. Congratulations!

                  Comment

                  • uncjim
                    Junior Member
                    • Dec 2008
                    • 22

                    #10
                    Red,
                    Dr. Wong humble? This must be a new gig...kidding..KIDDING! I couldn't agree more. Congratulations. I can't wait to see your progress. Understand the "roller coaster" is real. Beyond month 4, it's gravy. All the Best.
                    UNC
                    View My Hair Transplant Blog

                    Comment

                    • bigmac
                      Senior Member
                      • Nov 2008
                      • 253

                      #11
                      Hi Red
                      Very interesting post about the single baldes.

                      I checked with Janna from SMG if they used these on me which they did.

                      She was kind enough to answer my questions and wrote this reply to me which i thought i would share.

                      Quote

                      Dr. Ron Shapiro wrote an article about the benefits of single blade harvesting in the HT text book. At SMG, for each session, there are two separate SCORING blades set up with different size of width of blades to coincide with patient's laxity and goal of the session. They are used to nick/score the surface of the skin only. We take the strips in multi sections to accommodate the laxity in different parts of the head. Some doctors will use a permanent marker and measuring tape to mark out the strip first then use the single blade scalpel. It's a matter of preference but the scoring method seems a bit more efficient, imo. Once the scoring is complete, a blunt hemostat or a Haber Spreader is used to spread the tissue apart to achieve virtually 0 percent transection.

                      However, I've seen first hand at Live Surery Workshops that even the use of single blade scalpels without the spreaders get high transection rates if the docs are not experienced or skilled. There are more likihood of t-factors if just a multi blades is used because even if the top part of the strip looks perfect without transections, the bottom portion of the strip may be filled with transected hairs because due to the angle, it is a blind cut.

                      ************************************************** ***

                      One other point you mention is for patients to chect to see what blades a doc uses.This is something which never crossed my mind,maybe some pictures of blades etc would help people as most patients wont have a clue what the differences are.

                      Cheers bm.

                      Comment

                      • Red20
                        Senior Member
                        • Dec 2008
                        • 100

                        #12
                        Hi Bigmac!


                        Here is a write up by Dr Cole who explains the benefits of the single-blade scalpel much better than I do:

                        As its name implies, single strip harvesting is the method by which a single strip of hair-bearing scalp is carefully, indeed, painstakingly, excised from the donor area; the strip is then broken down into its smallest functional units, or follicular units. Before single strip harvesting came to the fore in recent years, older, infinitely more wasteful methods were employed.

                        The first of these was the circular, punch grafts of yore, which have little to recommend them save their simplicity (they are essentially biopsy punches), and the ease with which they were directly placed into correspondingly circular holes in the recipient area. Next, ingenious surgeons devised multi-bladed scalpels; three or more (sometimes many more) blades, attached to a handle, were oriented parallel to one another, and many thin, narrow, long strips could be excised with one pass of the scalpel.

                        These strips could then be placed flat on their sides and sliced into small mini- and micro-grafts, with little or no concern for follicular unit integrity. This, however, was not the only drawback; transaction rates were generally rather high, and were even higher when more blades were used. So time was saved, but lots of valuable follicles were wasted.


                        What we know as single strip harvesting overcomes many of these disadvantages. Using two passes with a single blade, or a single pass with a double-bladed knife, an elongated strip is excised. It is possible, with careful technique, to achieve transaction rates of less than 2% (this means that fewer than two FU’s per 100 are sliced in two).

                        It is estimated that transaction rates as high as 30% occur with the use of multi-bladed scalpels. Let’s do the math. If the patient needs 1000 grafts, then an area containing 1300 grafts would need to be removed just to account for wastage and still produce 1000 intact FU’s. If 2000 grafts were needed, 600 would need to be wasted! This is of serious import when we deal with a limited, finite amount of donor hair.

                        This leads us to a discussion of graft dissection. One of the reasons many surgeons have used multiple strip harvesting with multi-bladed scalpels, is that an intact, single strip presents a number of difficulties in dissection. It is too thick to place on its side or to shine light through (transilluminate) in order to visualize the individual FU’s.

                        Therefore, thin, multiple strips lend themselves to rapid, albeit inefficient, slicing of grafts. We feel, however, that the degree of wastage is unacceptably high, both during the strip harvest, and during graft preparation.

                        To avoid these problems, the techniques of stereo-microscopic "slivering" and dissection are utilized. As soon as the donor strip is harvested, the slivering process begins. This is extremely painstaking; the strip is divided into small "slivers", each one FU wide.

                        These are then laid flat on their sides, and, also under the microscope, the individual FU’s are carefully sliced out and trimmed of excess connective tissue and fat. During this process, the grafts are suspended in a physiologic saline solution and kept chilled; this insures their viability and health while they are "out of body". They are separated into one, two, three and four hair FU’s, according to their natural occurrence, and then carefully placed into the recipient sites.

                        We feel strongly that follicular unit transplantation is the state of the art in hair restoration surgery. Older techniques are easier and more lucrative for the surgeon, require a smaller operative team, and may be easier to "sell" with the false promise of higher density. Follicular unit transplantation, done with single strip harvesting and stereo-microscopic slivering and dissection, requires patience, a large team, and meticulous work by the surgeon and assistants.

                        Despite these demanding criteria, we are committed to using and refining this technique; in one or two sessions, patients can achieve results that are natural, undetectable, and will stand the dual tests of time and of advancing baldness.
                        CIT Isolation Technique Guide: Expert insights on advanced hair transplant approach. Learn about precision, benefits, and transformative results.

                        Comment

                        • Red20
                          Senior Member
                          • Dec 2008
                          • 100

                          #13
                          Originally posted by PayDay
                          Looks like a great hair transplant so far. Congratulations!
                          Thanks PayDay. I appreciate that.

                          Comment

                          • Red20
                            Senior Member
                            • Dec 2008
                            • 100

                            #14
                            Originally posted by uncjim
                            Red,
                            Dr. Wong humble? This must be a new gig...kidding..KIDDING! I couldn't agree more. Congratulations. I can't wait to see your progress. Understand the "roller coaster" is real. Beyond month 4, it's gravy. All the Best.
                            UNC

                            Hi Jim!

                            Did you use anything special after your hair transplant?

                            I read about the benefits of MSM so I have started taking 3,000 milligrams a day.

                            I am also using a colloidal silver product called "silver gel" on my donor incision to aid in healing. It's a mixture of aloe and colloidal silver in a gel.

                            Comment

                            • uncjim
                              Junior Member
                              • Dec 2008
                              • 22

                              #15
                              Hi Red,
                              My post op treatment was a simple anti-bacterial ointment, Bactroban. Beyond that, all I've ever used is one quarter tablet of Proscar every other day. In Dr. Wong's words, "It will keep your prostate healthy and let you keep the hair that you have".
                              Jim
                              View My Hair Transplant Blog

                              Comment

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