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Hair Transplant - A Permanent Baldness Treatment

Hair Transplant - A Permanent Baldness Treatment


Hair Transplantation Hair transplantation involves harvesting dihydrotestosterone (DHT) resistant follicles from the back of

the head and transplanting them into the balding area. Hair follicles at the back of the head, transplanted to the top of the

head, cause permanent hair growth. Hair transplantation involves the removal of small pieces of hair and follicles from a

donor area (usually hair on the back of the head and sides of the head) and transferring them to a bald or thinning area.


Hair transplant surgery allows the surgeon to move healthy hair onto the scalp in areas with thinning hair. Hair follicles in

the occipital region are resistant to hair loss and remain the main source of grafts used in hair transplant surgery. Unlike

other cosmetic procedures, the results of a successful hair transplant are permanent as the transplanted hair follicles will

continue to grow throughout the life of the patient. The survival rate of transplanted hair is determined by factors such as

oxidative stress, infections, edema, and recipient or donor dominance, which refers to the likelihood that the surrounding

balding tissue will affect the transplanted tissue [8].


Donor dominance is the ability of hair transplanted from healthy donor sites to the scalp to take root and grow normally when

transplanted into bald areas. Hair grafted from these areas (called autografts) to bald areas will eventually grow and keep

growing. The part of the scalp that has hair is partially trimmed, moved to a new location, and sewn on. Various methods are

available, but all hair transplant operations involve taking skin with hair from one part of the head and transplanting these

pieces of skin onto bald or thinned areas of the scalp or injured areas.


The concept of hair transplantation dates back to the 1950s, when it was discovered that patches of hair and skin could be

moved from the back or sides of the head (an area usually unaffected by age-related hair loss) to bald areas of the scalp.

.Early The hair restoration is known as the FUT (Follicular Unit Transplant) method, which involves excising a section of

scalp, dividing it into progressively smaller graft units, and eventually transplanting to the bald areas of the frontal and

coronal scalp. In the most common method, a strip of "tissue" is removed from the back of the head, the follicles are

dissected into single and multiple follicle tufts, and then transplanted into the balding area. At the end of the hair

transplant, the person still has the same amount of hair, just more evenly distributed on the scalp.


Women can have hair transplants in exactly the same way as men, but careful planning is required because hair loss is common

and it is difficult or even impossible to thicken the entire scalp. Hair transplants are mainly used to treat a hereditary

hair loss called androgenetic alopecia (male-pattern or, less commonly, female-pattern baldness).


Hair Transplant - A Permanent Baldness Treatment
Hair Transplant - A Permanent Baldness Treatment


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