Welcome to the Foundation for Hair Restoration's BLOG. As Founder and Director of the Foundation for Hair Restoration, and one of the top hair transplant surgeons, I feel a responsibility to educate those experiencing hair loss on the common sense, intelligent approach to surgical hair restoration. After more than 14 years of specializing exclusively in surgical hair restoration, my track record of having literally thousands and thousands of happy patients speaks for itself.
As an American Board Certified Facial Plastic Surgeon and American Board Hair Restoration Surgeon, I attempt to apply aesthetic plastic surgery principles to surgical hair restoration, allowing for the most aesthetic, natural appearing results. All of the other Foundation for Hair Restoration Surgeons are also highly skilled and trained to achieve similar results. And with the microscopic technique of follicular unit grafting, for the first time, it is in fact possible to attain restorations that, even with the hair cut short, look completely natural.
I am proud of the top notch devoted doctors, technicians and staff affiliated with The Foundation for Hair Restoration. We are pleased to invite all of our visitors to learn from the questions of others who find themselves with a similar concern: hair thinning or loss issues and other hair related concerns.
I am debating between FUT and FUE techniques for hair transplant
Posted July 09, 2010 11:07 AM in Follicular Unit Extraction (fue)
Question:
I am debating between FUT and FUE techniques for hair transplant. I am fairly young and hair loss is not too extensive at this point. With what I can gather, this means I am more likely to need an additional procedure in the future. When you have a second procedure does this mean you also have an additional scar? This might help make the decision between the two techniques.
Answer:
Personally, if you can do an FUT technique, it certainly is to your advantage for the reason that FUT techniques get a better take of hair and an overall better result. The FUE is a good technique for people who are planning on having very short hair or people who have obvious scar problems like keloids and hypertrophic scar formation. However, there is a less high percentage of hair take in the transplanted area from that and there is some loss of the follicles in the process of removing the FUE grafts. If you are going to have a second procedure, the fact that that you had FUT is not a problem because most of the new hair removed is done through the old original scar. You do not have to have a second scar, the new one can be placed over the first one and you still look excellent. As long as you keep your hair over about three-quarters of an inch in length, there should be no problem hiding this.
Posted by Richard Galitz, MD, FACS
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I am 44 years old and have undergone chemotherapy
Posted June 27, 2010 10:13 AM in Follicular Unit Extraction (fue)
Question:
I am 44 years old and have undergone chemotherapy. I lost all my hair and the hair that has come back is a different texture and color. I would like a hair transplant but I do not want any scars, I just want a complete head of hair. Would you recommend an FUE procedure?
Answer:
It is hard to recommend an FUE procedure without seeing you. If you are going to wear your hair fairly long in length, the advantages of FUE are not that great. However, if you absolutely do not want a scar, FUE is the best procedure for you but it is important to point out that there potentially will be scarring as multiple small incisions are made to remove the follicles one at a time. I suggest that you meet with a qualified hair transplant surgeon who can discuss the alternatives and come up with the procedure that is best for you.
Posted by Dr. Siporin
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How much more is FUE than a traditional strip procedure?
Posted January 20, 2010 7:34 AM in Follicular Unit Extraction (fue)
How much more is FUE than a traditional strip procedure?
In most cases the FUE will cost 50% to 80% more than a strip procedure.
Posted by Jeffrey S. Epstein, MD, FACS
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Why does FUE cost more than a strip procedure?
Posted January 20, 2010 7:34 AM in Follicular Unit Extraction (fue)
Why does FUE cost more than a strip procedure?
FUE is much more time consuming and meticulous work. It involves removing each individual follicle one by one and then placing them one by one, several thousand times. This means it is usually a two day procedure, and requires two days in the O.R., more staff and more of the Doctor's time.
Posted by Jeffrey S. Epstein, MD, FACS
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What is the difference between FUE and FUT?
Posted January 20, 2010 7:27 AM in Follicular Unit Extraction (fue)
What is the difference between FUE and FUT?
FUT is a procedure where a small strip of skin with hair is removed from the back of the scalp. This area is then closed with simple sutures or stitches and eventually heals to a fine line scar. An FUE procedure is where individual follicles are extracted one by one without an incision and results in no scar.
Posted by Jeffrey S. Epstein, MD, FACS
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I had a previous "strip" hair restoration procedure, should I get an FUE procedure this time?
Posted January 20, 2010 7:22 AM in Follicular Unit Extraction (fue)
I had a previous "strip" hair restoration procedure, should I get an FUE procedure this time?
The main reason to get an FUE procedure is to avoid the scar in the donor area. Since you already have a scar, you would be a candidate for another strip procedure. The surgeon would excise the original scar, and you would heal with a scar of the same size as before. In some cases, the patient may opt for a strip and an FUE procedure to maximize the number of available grafts. Unless you are tress you are trying to maximize the donor area.
Posted by Jeffrey S. Epstein, MD, FACS
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