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No matter which type of graft is utilized, the basics of hair transplantation are the same. I will attempt to describe these basics along with the most commonly used techniques. In order to understand hair transplantation, it is necessary to understand the concept of donor dominance.
A scalp may be divided roughly into two separate areas. One is the area susceptible to balding and the other, of course, is the area not. The horseshoe fringe of hair left behind on a bald man’s scalp is the area from which hair can be safely donated. Hair transplanted from this area of the scalp will not be susceptible to balding even when it is placed right in the middle of the bald scalp. This new hair maintains the same characteristics of the hair left behind in the donor area no matter where it is transplanted to the scalp. This is what is meant by donor dominance.

Figure 4-2.
Different areas in the recipient area.
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| Multiple methods may be used to harvest
this donor hair. In the early days of hair transplantation, the hair was removed
in 4 mm plugs about the size of a pencil eraser. Multiple plugs were removed
simultaneously and the area was allowed to heal in by itself. Although the
healing areas were messy the first week because of the weeping from the open
wound, the areas tended to heal well. The primary problem was the cobblestone
scar pattern left behind. Eventually the plugs were taken out in rows so that
the edges could be sewn together. |

Figure 4-3.
Transplants were originally performed by removing 4 mm plugs from the shaved
donor area and then transferring them into 4 mm holes in the recipient area.
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This led to the idea of excising strips
of tissue rather than plugs. The open area left by the strip was more
easily
sutured together. As the grafts that were transplanted became smaller,
physicians began to use multi-bladed scalpels. With a single pass of a
multi-bladed knife, they could produce multiple, thin strips facilitating the
quick dissection of grafts. Now, since the advent of follicular unit
transplantation, many physicians will excise the strip with a single scalpel
blade in order to minimize the transaction of the follicular units. Most
follicular unit proponents feel that the transaction rate with a multi- bladed
knife is unacceptably high and could lead to reduced growth of the transplanted
hair.
In regards to the recipient area, during the early days of hair
transplantation, the 4 mm plug removed from the back of the scalp was then
simply implanted intact into the balding area in the front of the scalp. This
certainly gave volume to the thinning hair but at the unacceptable price of
extreme “plugginess” as the remainder of the preexisting hair eventually
disappeared. Grafts were gradually down-sized to quartered 4 mm plugs and then
to minigrafts. Minigrafts are small plugs of hair containing 3 to 10 hairs each.
They are produced by cutting the excised strip or strips down to smaller sizes
without magnification and without regard to follicular units. This certainly
reduces the harshness of the “pudginess”, but by no means does it remove the
problem entirely. Instead of fewer, big plugs, there are numerous small plugs.
Micrografts were developed to hide this “plugginess” in the hairline.
Micrografts consist of 1 to 2 hairs dissected without magnification and without
regard to the follicular units. These are a tremendous aid in helping to
disguise the artificiality of minigraft hairlines. |

Figure 4-4.
Hair transplants are now performed by excising a strip from the donor area,
suturing the open area shut, dissecting the strip into small grafts, and then
transferring them into small holes in the recipient area
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| Follicular unit transplantation was the next major
milestone in hair transplantation. A follicular unit is the natural unit hair
grows in on the scalp. If the scalp is shaved and magnified, the follicular
units are evident as the 1 to 4 hair groupings exiting the scalp from single
points. Each individual follicular unit has a single root system. Follicular
unit transplantation is defined as the dissection underneath a microscope of the
individual follicular units followed by the implantation of these single units
into the balding area. Emphasis is placed on not disturbing the root systems
while dissecting the 1 to 4 hair grafts. A microscope is required for the
adequate visualization necessary to avoid transection of the follicular unit
root system. Since these 1 to 4 hair grafts are transferred individually, there
should be no “plugginess”. |

Figure 4-5.
Close up of shaved scalp showing the individual follicular units as bundles of 1
to 4 hairs.
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The recipient site in the front or top of the scalp
must be prepared to accept the various forms of grafts. The recipient site for
the 4 mm plugs was simply a similar-sized hole created with a punch. A punch is
a small, circular, cookie-cutter type knife that creates tiny, circular holes in
the skin. The recipient sites for minigrafts are made with either scalpel blade
incisions or small 1.5 to 2.0 mm punches. Lasers have been utilized to create
recipient sites for minigrafts to no great advantage, but certainly at greater
costs. The recipient sites for follicular units are made by inserting small
needles into the scalp to create tiny holes.
The implanting of the
grafts is considered the most technically difficult portion of the procedure. As
the grafts have become smaller, the skill required to gently insert them with a
fine pair of forceps (tweezer-like instruments) has greatly increased. These
grafts must be grasped and inserted without traumatizing the tissue, or poor
growth is risked. This gentleness combined with the close-spacing of the grafts
makes a planter with good hands, patience, and a sense of perfectionism,
critical.
But does it hurt? The skin of the donor and recipient areas is
anesthetized with local numbing shots. Most surgeons will either have their
patients take pills to help them relax, such as Valium or Xanax, or inject
medicines intravenously to put them to sleep before beginning the numbing shots.
Although the intravenous medicines sound appealing since the patient is asleep,
the patient and the surgeon must assume an increased level of risk. It is
possible for the patient to stop breathing for himself, and monitoring equipment
is required to check the patient’s status. The risk of severe complications
seems to be quite small, but from a personal standpoint, that risk is not
justified in my patients. In no way am I suggesting that the use of I.V.
medicines is inappropriate. It is, simply, my experience that a patient who has
taken something orally to help him relax and who is treated with gentleness and
care does just as well, without the increased risk.
Various agents can be
applied to the skin prior to the injections to reduce the sensation of the
needle stick. Injection techniques such as tumescent anesthesia and nerve blocks
further facilitate patient comfort. Tumescent anesthesia involves the injection
of dilute anesthetics into the deeper, fatty tissue first. The fatty tissue is
far less sensitive to injection pain than the skin. After it has been numbed,
the skin injections are much less tender. Nerve blocks involve the injection of
anesthetic around the bases of the nerves that supply the front of the scalp.
These are located right above each eyebrow. Once the bases of these nerves are
numbed, work in the central-frontal scalp is painless. The primary reason
injections anywhere on the body hurt is due to the anesthetic being pushed into
the skin too rapidly because either the person performing the injection is
impatient or uncompassionate.
But, again, does it hurt? My answer is that
if the procedure is performed by an experienced, gentle, and caring surgeon, it
will hurt very little. After almost every procedure, I hear the same thing, “If
I would have known how easy this was, I would have done it a long time ago”. On
the other hand, if the surgeon lacks these qualities, (whether done under I.V.
sedation or not) yes, it can hurt.
Very few hair transplants are
performed by the physician alone. With the advent of minigrafts, and then,
especially, follicular units, the amount of work required to prepare and implant
the grafts has increased logarithmically. Surgeons working alone would only be
able to perform small follicular unit transplantation sessions. Most surgeons
plan the procedure, perform the excision and repair, and then oversee a team of
technicians who dissect the grafts and then implant them. In my office, a
typical follicular unit transplantation session will take six to ten hours and
require four technicians, two dissecting and two planting. During the majority
of the procedure, the patient relaxes in a reclined position. He may pass the
time by watching television or movies, listening to music, chatting with the
staff, or simply napping.
After the transplant is completed, bandaging of
the head is usually unnecessary. On occasion, if a patient is oozing a little
from the donor area, a bandage will be applied like a headband for several
hours. Patients leave wearing a baseball cap to hide what has been done. Sutures
or staples are removed in about ten days from the donor area. There are no
sutures in the recipient area.
The transplanted hair shaft typically
falls out during the first month after surgery. The root system is still present
just as if the hair had been plucked. The new hair starts to grow in three to
five months. This transplanted hair is now permanent hair not susceptible to the
progressive nature of male pattern baldness. This hair may thin out when the
patient reaches seventy to eighty years of age, but this is a general thinning
known as senile alopecia which causes hair over the entire scalp to begin to
disappear. Otherwise, the new hair is permanent. The transplanted hair
occasionally grows in a little kinky and coarse during the first year, but it
will ultimately appear just like the hair in the donor area. It will grow and
need to be cut probably more frequently then any surrounding miniaturized
preexisting hair. It can be colored and styled any way the patient likes. If
another transplant is desired, usually I will ask my patients to wait a minimum
of six months so that I will know where the new growth is and I can transplant
between the previous grafts. |
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