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jacksonbrowne

Regular Member
  • Posts

    48
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Basic Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Country
    United States
  • State
    MA

Hair Loss Overview

  • Describe Your Hair Loss Pattern
    Receding Hairline (Genetic Baldness)
  • How long have you been losing your hair?
    In the last 10 years
  • Norwood Level if Known
    Norwood III
  • What Best Describes Your Goals?
    Maintain and Regrow Hair
    Considering Surgical Hair Restoration

Hair Loss Treatments

  • Have you ever had a hair transplant?
    No
  • Current Non-Surgical Treatment Regime
    Rogaine Extra Strength for Men

jacksonbrowne's Achievements

Real Hair Club Member

Real Hair Club Member (2/8)

10

Reputation

  1. I see homeless people in my neighborhood all the time with full heads of hair. These guys smoke and drink all the time yet keep their mane. Plus looking at pictures of all the concentration camp ghettos in addition to starving peoples throughout the world. Those men lived in slave like conditions. Many of them skinny to the bone still sporting a full head of hair. There is no empirical evidence to support the assertion that Japanese men went bald at an accelerated rate after the introduction of a western diet sometime around the 1900's. Thus far it's just anecdotal evidence that has been perpetuated on the internet. Empirical evidence doesn't exist to support many of these assumptions of diet affecting hair. Yes diet has been shown to affect the quality of hair growth, but nothing to suggest that it causes MPB.
  2. Don't like the side effects of Fin, i'm back on Rogaine again. After close to 7 months off Wellbutrin and heavy aspartame consumption, i'm going to wait it out a year to see the benefits. I thought that the benefits of getting an HT was so one doesn't need to mess around with pills and topical solutions.
  3. Propecia for females? Not concerned that it hasn't been studied in depth for use in women or its long term effects? Snap a pic of just your hairline, don't worry, no one will be able to tell who you are. If you expect an answer, even a ballpark figure, anyone, medical professional or not, will need a baseline from which to judge. Otherwise, it's like trying to land a jumbo jet while flying blind.
  4. I read up on SMP over a year ago. I'd shy away from it since it'd be hard to get rid of if I ever decided to shave my head. To all the hair loss experts, is this a realistic hairline given my state of balding?
  5. Hi there Lukey, your pattern resembles mine very closely. http://www.hairrestorationnetwork.com/eve/156613-hairline-recession-age-3-31-need-opinions.html I was able to sweep it forward until around 28 when the central forelock started thinning. I tried a years each worth of propecia and avodart ditching both and rogaine sporadically. With the temples swept so far back, it makes your forehead look abnormally huge like mine.Best of luck to you and hope you're able to keep what you already have long term.
  6. SMP? I usually buzz it off and you're right, sanity first. Because my temporal points are swept so far back, it looks like two flaps fluttering around chasing my frontal forelock. Hat is still my best friend.
  7. This is my crown and top in 2005. Any signs of crown thinning in the picture?
  8. It's now 2 years later. I thought things couldn't get any worse, but...... -Hairline remains the same. -Thinning significantly on top and in back. Frontal forelock remains. -Hair won't grow as long. Additionally, hair has thinned in the permanent zones as well. I'm surprised at how hair texture has changed from raw and coarse to thin and wispy. In 2010, I could sweep it forward and cover the enormous temple bald spots. That's no longer possible. A giant bald patch is forming along the crown area where the cowlick is. No bald spot, but the area is noticeably thinning and I can no longer comb it over. Since January (6.5 months) I have made some dietary changes along with discontinuing certain meds (Wellbutrin) I suspect of exacerbating the situation. I'm still on adderall (amphetamine) which is known to cause hair loss. -No more diet cola or any products containing aspartame (was drinking 3 litres/day diet soda) -Discontinued Wellbutrin. I've noticed that hair is growing in at a faster rate (globally) with some minor thickening in the temporal triangle area.I'm hoping that with the dietary and medicine changes, the permanent zones will grow back thicker and coarser and hopefully some improvement on top and in back.
  9. Paul Teutel Sr. from the show American Chopper, owner of Orange County Choppers (OCC) has had an HT. It looks decent on TV, though somedays it appears thinner than others. At his age, his hair looks pretty thin, but it does look good. His son Paul Teutel jr, is quickly receding both on top and his temples. Jr., rarely takes off his cap and is obviously well aware of the situation. His haircuts in the early years were always kept a bit longer in front. http://cdn.picapp.com/ftp/Images/f/1/4/c/Paul_Teutul_Sr_cf62.jpg?adImageId=2194525&imageId=5949808
  10. I'd like to reference this post where Bauman shares his thoughts and postulates (in 2007) that he prefers 'rounds out' the temple points more than Hasson & Wong. Some good work in this one. I guess it's a bit of negotiation with the hair doc but i'd definitely take a higher hairline with stronger temple points. I've observed many people in class, public and on the train to the point of being stared back and have found that I prefer a higher hairline with stronger temples than a lower hairline w/weak temples. http://www.hairrestorationnetwork.com/eve/154445-temple-point-restoration-when-%22safe%22-do.html
  11. Thanks everyone for rallying and giving some great answers. I've developed a bit of an obsession with temple points and have noticed that great hair and strong temple points go hand in hand. MattJ brought up an interesting point, but from looking at photos and people iMO, strong temple points look good regardless of deep recession. Look at Jude Law vs. Phil Collins. The criminal Whitey Bulger. Look at Kevin Spacey who is in dire need of some temple point. Personally, I feel that the 'cove' effect like seen on Jude Law looks stronger than w/o.
  12. At the risk of being criticized, i'm growing increasingly frustrated by the lack of input to my questions. Before posting a thread, I search these forums to avoid duplicate posts/threads and answer my own questions. Also, i've generally scoured the existing literature available on the internet. I've tried my best at maintaining etiquette on these forums, but so far have not been satisfied with the answers. Because opinions vary greatly amongst the medical field on Ht restoration guidlines I seek out opinions from HT specialists. Perhaps the mods/community can tell me how to best attract answers to my questions without directly resorting to PM'ing indivuals.
  13. Why isn't more emphasis placed on the temporal peaks/triangle in HT's? my uniformed opinion is that temporal peak restoration helps balance out weak transplanted hairlines with minimal grafts necessary. My temporal peaks/triangles have always been thinner than the hair surrounding it. Sure there is a chance it could recede back, but from what i've gathered, it takes about 200 grafts to fill in the peaks and 400 to resculpt them. How come more docs don't emphasize it?
  14. Thanks for the link, thats the kind of info i was looking for. Density varies along the strip from ear to ear, but say you extract a 10" strip by 1/2", thats 5sq inches of hair thats needed to cover much larger areas! It helps give a rough measure of how much donor vs how much recipient area that needs to be covered. I need a good 7-10sq inche in the temple area(s) alone so thats at least a 2:1 coverage ratio. i'd really love for someone to answer FUE vs FUT graft growth quality questio.
  15. In general, what is the avg width of an a person with avg laxity? I'm trying to calculate some sq cm of strips taken out to see how much coverage that strip has to provide.
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