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Hair Restoration Discussion Forum - By and For Hair Loss Patients |
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Hi everyone I know the scar takes months to heal after strip surgery, but what causes scar stretching? thanks
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My Hair Loss Website - Hair Transplant with Dr. Feller |
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Hi everyone I know the scar takes months to heal after strip surgery, but what causes scar stretching? thanks
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My Hair Loss Website - Hair Transplant with Dr. Feller |
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The main reason for scar stretching I believe is excessive tension at the closure, which greatly depends on the doctor's skill.
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----- I am the Greece consultant for Hasson & Wong. My opinions are my own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Hasson & Wong. My Hair Loss Website - Hair Transplant with Dr. Hasson |
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Patients physiology also plays a part in scar strecthing - some patients have stretchy skin. How is your scar Mgem at this time - does it appear to have strecthed at all because the redness at this early stage can throw a bit of a red herring in the mix along with any possible shockloss.
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Consultant for Dr. Feller, Coalition Member and Dr. Lindsey, Coalition Member. See my results --->>My Hair Loss Website I am not a medical professional and my words should not be taken as medical advice. All opinions and views shared are my own. "Research-Research-Research" |
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mmhce thanks for the link good info there, thanks comb,i have still got a few scabs left on one side, but the nurse missed a few of the staples somehow?, so i had to back a few days later, apart from that i think everything is good at this stage thanks spex. I will put some more pics up next week for the 1 month mark. mgem
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My Hair Loss Website - Hair Transplant with Dr. Feller |
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Ricardo Mejia MD, FAAD Jupiter FL Hair Transplant Network recommended physician; photos |
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Scar stretching is almost purely a physiolgoical phenomenon, and the surgeon has very little to do with it EXCEPT when he takes a strip that is too wide.
To get around that problem, most HT doctors choose to take a long but NARROW strip. This way you can get just as many grafts, but with almost no tension on the closure. That said, a patient with the perfect excision and closure can STILL get scar stretching- even if there was NO tension on the wound. In fact, there are people who can get scar stretch even without a strip being taken. For these patients, a single incision is all it takes. In my experience, patients with very flexible skin tend to be the worst scar stretchers. This is the exact OPPOSITE of what one might think, but there it is. I have found that the very best scar formers are those patients with thick, relatively non-flexible skin. Even after EXTREMELY high tension closures these patients often have nearly invisible scars. Just goes to show that things may turn out to be exactly the opposite of what one might initially think; and it's these paradoxes that make surgery a wonderful challenge. Hope this helps, Dr. F
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Feller Medical, PC Great Neck, NY Dr. Alan Feller is a member of the Coalition of Independent Hair Restoration Physicians Providing Hair Transplants and Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) Treatments |
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Dr Feller makes a good point. It is well known the patients we worry the most about are the ones with very elastic scalps.
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Ricardo Mejia MD, FAAD Jupiter FL Hair Transplant Network recommended physician; photos |
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