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mattj

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Posts posted by mattj

  1. Rupert Everett.Saw him on a news show with his hair clippered short,camera panned behind him...BAM!several scars!

    Hairline looked good though.

     

    This photo before and after alleged surgery surfaced recently. His hair looks thicker and perhaps a little lower at the front in the before photo. Perhaps the result of a facelift?

     

     

    Rupert_Everett_Surgery.jpg

  2. Finasteride is the main ingredient featured in Propecia. There are other brands like Proscar among others. Same thing goes to Minoxidil. I am using Regaine, and there are so many other brands available but the main ingredient is Minoxidil

     

    Slight correction: propecia and proscar are both brand names given to the original finasteride drug produced by pharmaceutical company Merck. There are generic finasteride products but they don't use either propecia or proscar brand names. These include Fincar, which is produced by Cipla.

     

    I use a generic finasteride produced by Pfizer. As Pfizer are themselves a large pharmaceuticals company I feel that I must be getting a quality product.

  3. If I might be so bold as to add to what Adrian has said, Dr Rahal would never try and talk you into going through with anything that you were uncomfortable with, and would never place your hairline any lower than you want it to be.

  4. If your pill cutter is the same as the one I started out with, I'm not surprised you're having trouble with it. I quickly moved on to scalpel blades. They have to be sharp and it's surprising how the tablets can dull the blade after a while, but it's easy to get four pieces with a sharp blade.

     

     

    I just bite into my tablet and happy days. One day i might get slightly more than the other but the intake is regular and in appropriate dose to help fight the evil DHT.

     

    S

     

    I would barely be able to get two bites out of a fin tablet, let alone 4. :eek:

  5. Your hair does look pretty darn thick overall. Have you noticed any thickening at the areas of concern since starting the finasteride? I think it's still possible to see some continued thickening at the crown after 6 months, and either way it doesn't really look bad enough to touch at this time. At the front I do see recession and although it doesn't look bad at all and shouldn't prevent you from enjoying the same social activities you've always enjoyed, I do understand that it will be distressing to a guy. If you were to get surgery I would concentrate on the front and really try an resist aiming for where your hairline might have been before the hairloss curse took hold.

     

    Is it possible to take some better photos? If you were to send some out to doctors it would help if they were a bit clearer and larger, and also it would help if your hair was brushed back.

  6. I wouldn't like to guess at the exact numbers, but I'm sure a very large proportion of MPB sufferers use the generic medication with no problems. I'm sure by now that the online community would've noticed if generic finasteride was genuinely less effective.

  7. A positive thing I can see is that your hair appears to be thick and wavy. If at some point in the future you do find yourself undergoing a transplant, this should work in your favour by providing good coverage with fewer grafts than if your hair were fine and straight.

     

    I know it's a clich? but have you considered buzzing your hair very short? It can be a shock to adjust to having a shaved head but the aesthetic effect is often superior to the balding look.

     

    When you say your hair is still falling out (after a year on propecia) are you saying that you've noticed your hair is continuing to thin, or that you're still seeing fallen hairs? If the latter then that isn't necessarily anything to worry about.

  8. I think that is rather unfair, ES. First of all, the grafts used for flatpro's transplant covered quite a large area of scalp. They were not all packed into the first couple of centimetres of hairline and the density is hardly extreme at around 50%. The hairline isn't even that low, starting above the backward sweep of the forehead. The temples are closed which isn't something unique to Dr Rahal's work. The number of grafts used to do this is relatively few.

     

    Secondly, I have seen no army of disgruntled patients - not patients of Dr Rahal nor any of the other top surgeons. I can only think of one clinic which is dealing with that sort of thing. And to say that only those four doctors you mentioned have their reputations intact strikes me as an atypical belief to say the least.

  9. I'm not sure that the tiny increase in dosage could be the cause of the changes you've noticed, but it certainly can't be ruled out.

     

    With a sharp enough blade I think it would be possible to split each quarter piece in half again. I know blades can get surprisingly blunt after they've chopped enough proscar.

  10. I am pretty sure I am in the same boat. I can put very limited information on here. I was wondering if anyone can give me some advice. I had a procedure done last year and it totally ruined my hair and scalp. I was a NW2 and now am past a 3. The shock loss made my whole frontal region fall out and had no growth. I signed a document called "mutual agreement to maintain privacy", so I am unsure how far I can describe what happened to me without being sued...any advice?

    I doubt very much if you could be legally bound to not discuss your hair transplant at all. In some situations, forums like this might be the only places a patient can turn to, and nobody has the right to withhold the potentially valuable advice from you. To be safe, it's probably best not to say who your doctor was, but you can describe your situation.

     

     

    But of course I'm not a lawyer and I haven't read your contract. I'm just saying what seems reasonable.

     

    It would be prudent, though, to ensure that you have exhausted all avenues of assistance with the clinic who performed your transplant.

  11. Everyone wants to keep costs down when getting a transplant, but it's sort of alarming that you're in such a rush and are choosing the location based on price. You could be setting yourself up for a nightmare. This is a demanding surgical field and there is a vast gap between the best and the worst surgeons.

     

    But having said that, I'm pleased to see Dr Keser on your list as some very nice results have been coming from his clinic. I don't know what his prices are but presumably you've checked and he is within your price range. Unless you get any positive info on the others (who I am not familiar with myself), I would focus on him.

     

    I think the consensus here would be that manual punches give the surgeon greatest control and less chance of destroying grafts. You would want punch sizes of less than 1mm. 0.8mm and 0.9mm being common punch sizes for minimal scarring.

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