Jump to content

CuriousJungleGeorge

Senior Member
  • Posts

    179
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by CuriousJungleGeorge

  1. We constantly hear about how important it is to select a good hair-transplant surgeon, because the incisions he makes in the recipient areas determine how good the transplant will be, and his handling of the donor region predicts how undetectable excision scar will turn out.

     

    I wonder, though, how important is it which technicians work on a patient? Unlike with surgeons, patients typically know nothing about the team of technicians that will be working on them (other than whether or not it has been assembled by a competent physician) and tend, then, to have no say whatever in whom they get.

     

    Can a mediocre technician produce mediocre results from masterly crafted recipient incisions?

     

    Thank you.

  2. Originally posted by Forrest Gump:

    Bandoayan,

     

    Dr Manoj Khanna is horrible. As part of my job, I have to make frequent travels to Asia, including India. During one such trip, I made an appointment with Manoj Khanna. I've never seen such rude staff at a doctor's office. The lady at the front desk was outright nasty.

     

    Manoj Khanna showed me some of his work (on his PC), and none of them seemed that impressive - however it's also possible that the camera used was not that good. He used sales pressure tactics that I've never seen at any doctor's office. I had the appointment with him on an evening (around 7 pm or so), and he asked me to have my hair transplant surgery the very next day at 8 am (while I was talking about having the surgery 6 months down the line)! Needless to say, I just ran out of the nearest door as fast as I could, before he or his staff members could get a hold of my hair. icon_smile.gif

     

    Certainly, I'm not saying none of that matters, but, none of it reflects on his competence as a surgeon.

  3. Originally posted by AFK:

    all in all, I just want as little hassle as possible. I am working very hard to save for this. I know there is alot more to h.t.'s, but I don't want to be rewarded for my determination with a a 40-yr olds hairline. I am only 24 and I am usually taken to be 32. I would like to enjoy at least a few years of my youth feeling youthful <<img src="http://www.hairrestorationnetwork.com/infopop/emoticons/icon_smile.gif" alt="Smile" width="15" height="15"><!--graemlin:icon_smile.gif--> I also don't understand why when I call alot of these h.t. places, their receptionists seem to know less than what I have learned! I have read the manuals already and don't need you to read them to me! ok I feel better now that thats off my chest.

     

    First, I think we have to give receptionists, consultants, and doctors credit when they seem to be "baby-stepping" you with information: they have no idea where you've been or what you know, and it's fair they assume you haven't researched the crap out the this procedure.

     

    Second, be very careful when you decide you're twenty-four years old, are mistaken for thirty-two, so would like the hairline of a sixteen-year-old to live out your youth happily. I get that that sounds reasonable ("The hell with when I'm sixty; give me a good decade or so, now"), but if you're quite bald at twenty-four, it's very likely you won't keep a sixteen-year-old's hair-line for even three or four years. The natural hair will keep receding, and you'll run out of donor supply to fill in the gaps. By thirty (which is much closer than you might think), you could end up with a bunch of hair at the front, and a lot of empty scalp behind, which will likely devastate you far more greatly than accepting a somewhat more "mature" hair-line right now. You have to balance your priorities. Unless you'll be dead by thirty, you shouldn't act like your whole life will be the next half-decade or so.

     

    Good luck.

  4. It should be reiterated that cosmetic surgery incorporates perhaps as much art as it does science (well, maybe a little less, but plenty, still). What's pleasing to one person might not be so to another -- you're bound to favor the doctor with whose aesthetics you happen to agree.

     

    Also, some physicians tend to be "conservative" while others are a little more "liberal." The former category is often said to be wiser and sometimes said to be more ethical, but if you have a sense of what you want, and a doctor still won't give it to you, you might favor someone less authoritarian.

     

    In hair-transplantation, as in most of life, the notion of "best" is not nearly so solid as it might first seem to be.

  5. I've heard good (well, maybe mixed) things about Dr. Armani. How were your results "terrible"?

     

    Anyway, no, I don't believe there is a "Tiger Woods" of hair transplantation. I understand your question, but, honestly, even its essence is mistaken. These are largely subjective things (who's "best" at something), and that extends even to sports: Michael Jordan is the "best" basketball player to some people, over-rated to others, and just "among the best" to some others.

     

    No one doctor is perfect, but there are several who are excellent.

  6. Originally posted by lovestospoon:

    I was not aware of any follow-up visits with my doctor. From what it seemed after the procedure I was gonna be on my own from now. So your saying after a couple of weeks I can pretty much do whatever I want with the exception of getting a sunburn?

     

    I certainly hope you won't be "on your own" after your surgery -- lol. Yes, you should have scheduled an appointment with your doctor for a visit the day after your procedure, when you would have been examined and cleaned up. After that, you need to go to the clinic again in a week or two (your doctor ought to let you know when) to have your sutures removed. Did you think the stitches would just stay in you...?

     

    Anyway, yes, after a couple of weeks, use sound judgement (don't get in a contest with your friends to see who can take the biggest brick to the back of the head), but know you should be able to live your life "normally" again (but, yes, sun-burn = bad [even without the procedure's having been performed]).

  7. First, just because your doctor didn't give you instructions for beyond two weeks now doesn't mean he won't do so when you see him within the first two weeks for your follow-up visit. Second, after the first couple of weeks, your life really is pretty much back to "normal" -- really, there aren't very many "instructions" for you to follow from that point on.

  8. I think it would be impractical for any hair-transplant surgeon to "focus" his or her practice on men in their early twenties; it's just a very small part of the potential market, most of which, I imagine, lies with men in their forties.

     

    That said, there's no reason a skilled doctor whose "base" is middle-aged would prove insufficient in treating a younger person. Is there something specific that concerns you?

  9. Thanks, Bill.

     

    Honestly, I'm not looking for a way to "speed" the process up; just to help it occur as efficiently and successfully as it can. I've been thinking about Mederma, but many opinions I've heard (a few of them from dermatologists) have said the product is complete nonsense. On one hand, I'm a bit tempted to adopt the "it can't hurt to try it" attitude; on the other, I'm opposed to trying random crap just for the sake of "giving it a shot."

     

    Maybe time is all that's required. Maybe I'll buy a tube of something. I don't know...

  10. I second the advice about the nickels...

     

    I think this sort of thing won't help your results come in faster. The fact is, follicles have their natural cycles of growth and dormancy, and it's illogical to think three months can turn in to one because you get more blood flowing to your head for two or three minutes a day (going for too long in the position actually can be harmful, so I'd recommend against it no matter your purpose).

     

    If you are intent to hang, maybe try it three or four days after the procedure, but be warned, you're going to feel as if your scalp (and your grafts) is about to fall off -- it'll not be a pleasant sensation.

  11. Is the purpose of your transplant just to bring your hair-line down a couple of centimeters? That is, are you not experiencing any hair-loss? Understand that it probably will take lots of grafts to achieve what you want, and, in the event you lose the hair behind that which is transplanted, you might not have enough donor supply left to fill in the space/s, giving you an "odd" appearance. Talk with your doctor about this, and really think the decision through.

×
×
  • Create New...