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yzuk

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Everything posted by yzuk

  1. I keep my hair short and like a buzz cut so I was told limited donor, beard and possibly some body donor could produce good results for that look. I'll check out the ones you mentioned, thanks.
  2. Thanks for that. My preference is to stay in the UK. For the repair I'll really need to do some research and yes I don't want to be palmed off to a technician like what happened with Rana Irfan.
  3. I'd consider Dr Koray but to be honest very cautious about going abroad unless I found a trusted surgeon. Do you have any suggestions? Thanks for replying.
  4. No idea. My post wasn't cleared and I used their contact form at least twice to report Rana Irfan was fraudulently claiming to be a registered surgeon. I didn't even get an acknowledgement let alone a proper response.
  5. Wow. I was told to see Greg Williams at Farjo by Dr Wade at the London Skin and Hair Clinic. I called two or three times the receptionist said he'd passed on my message but I got no response and he was also rude. I then went to Dr Shamalak instead. Glad I did.
  6. Just seen these replies they were going to spam. I saw Dr Shamalak who is looking at a 3000 graft FUE using what's left in the donor area and the beard area. I'm trying to sort finances for this. The worst thing is I suited a shaved head. Now I can't really shave my head or grow out my hair. Angry is an understatement and I'm still pursuing legal action as Rana Irfan is known (after my research talking to other surgeons) to be reckless and unhygienic. I don't know what possessed me to go against my original plan and listen to this "friend". @jameslondon Arrange a visit with Dr Shamalak at Crown Clinic he's in Harley Street once a month and his surgery is in Manchester. I saw Dr Jessen (embarrassing bodies TV show) who had his hair transplant with Dr Shamalak. Again, see how you feel before anything. The best advice I have is if in doubt walk out.
  7. Thank you brother. My main concern at the moment is to stop the recurring infections. After that I'll book a micro-dermabrasion session to try and smooth out the small bumps. When everything is stable I will either pursue some SMP or maybe just scar camouflage for the donor area. Since you're only at five months give it another couple of months and see if the bumps have settled. If there is no improvement then see a dermatologist preferably one with hair transplant experience.
  8. I'll try and put some pics up tonight I have hundreds. I'm out of London at the moment but back this evening. So you had grafts removed from donor area and implanted in the beard area?
  9. Hi Fozzie - what I regret the most is changing my mind from visiting Dr Koray. I knew this would be a major decision so wanted someone reputable. My choice was not based on cost, rather, trusting someone else's advice - who didn't know as much as he thought he did about hair transplants. My bad and I'm paying the price.
  10. Hi Abdul Haseeb, thanks for replying. When "time saving" enters the equation it's worrying. In my case the doctor had to refund half the cost and I'm not done yet. Fraud and money aside, you can't mess with people's health. Some clinics need to be shut down. In your case the doctor should not have harvested from one region especially if it's only 900 grafts - the donor area should have minimal impact. When the grafts are planted in a rush, they're either too shallow or the technicians don't trim excess tissue from the grafts. This is one of the things that happened to me. I also suffered obvious pitting (very noticeable in the light) as well as ridging and cobblestoning. If your only problem is cobblestoning you're quite fortunate. I have had recurring infections that are not normal and was told one of them was quite rare and was spread through poor hygiene. I have NEVER had any kind of infection in my whole life. If your issue is just cobblestoning have a look at dermabrasion and some tropical treatment through a recommend dermatologist. You can also camouflage the donor area scars with SMP depending on how short the hair is. Again, make sure you consult someone reputable. One more thing - when you say the doctor was board certified, what board is that? I'll put some pictures up later when I'm home.
  11. Hi All. I posted this over at Bald Truth but it looks like they don't allow negative reviews as my post was not approved... I'll cut a long story short. A year on from my nightmare FUE transplant with Dr Rana Irfan at Vagus Cosmetics in Islamabad, I thought I'd share my story. I've been meaning to do this for a long time but haven't been able to muster up the energy as it's revisiting a negative time. I planned to visit Dr Koray Erdogan for my FUE and was making arrangements to send his office my pictures and information etc. A friend of mine said he had come across a surgeon in Islamabad who had a good reputation, whom he was going to visit. This friend (?) was very studious when it came to researching doctors (or so I thought) so I trusted his diligence - my mistake. Apparently this doctor in Islamabad was just as good as Dr Koray and delivered the same results. As someone who had intended to visit doctor Koray for years, I can only blame myself for not going with my own plan. I was due to travel to Islamabad early last year with this friend for an FUE procedure. To cut a long story short - my friend went first (last April/May) and came back saying he was happy with the procedure. When I saw his results about a month after his procedure he was already shedding but I saw implants in the temples that looked odd and bumpy. He said this was apparently normal and the redness and bumps would settle. There was nothing untoward other than that. I traveled to Islamabad with this friend in June last year for my FUE. Prior to heading off I spoke to a Doctor Hussain in Islamabad who warned me against going to Dr Rana as people were known to come back with serious infections. We thought this was a case of rivalry perhaps so didn't really think anything of it. Another mistake. I arrived in late June and was told the doctor could do 5000 grafts. I did think this was rather optimistic but would have been happy with 4000. The day of the procedure, I was taken to theatre and after speaking with the surgeon and defining my hairline, the technicians applied anesthetic after shaving my head. A while later the doctor arrived and started remove grafts from the donor area. After a brief period he stopped and started to create slits in the recipient area. The technicians started to process the grafts and the doctor disappeared. I thought there's no way that could have been near even 3000 grafts. After a long delay I asked where the doctor was and someone went to summon him. He returned saying he had to pop in and see another patient but not to worry, he was undergoing an FUT procedure so it wouldn't be long process. I started to worry at this point. My friend had the sole attention of the surgeon during his procedure and I was told the doctor didn't carry out multiple procedures on the same day. When the doctor arrived I realised that the technicians in the corner of the room were processing grafts for the other patient - in the same room as where my procedure was being carried out. This is not going to end well I thought, but by now I was not in a position to just walk out. Prior to the surgery I had blood taken for PRP - my grafts were to be soaked in the PRP while waiting to be placed. A technician came in with my blood and put the vessel on the table for the other patient and was immediately scolded by another technician. Can this get any worse I thought. Yes it could. The doctor checked on how the grafts were being processed and disappeared again. This time for a long time. I was told to take a break and eat something. After eating the doctor had still not returned. He came back a long time after and I was not very happy and let him know. I'm condensing the timeline here, but when he returned and started to carry out a second round of extractions the anesthetic was starting to wear off and I could feel stinging pain. During the extraction there was a pause. A technician came in and told the doctor someone was here to see him. It was late by now. I was lying face down waiting for the extraction to continue. After a pause and period of inactivity I wondered what was going on - I looked up and there was another guy lying down in the chair to mine! The doctor was injecting PRP for him. I was stunned. Obviously I objected (I wasn't in a position to do much being in a robe and half my head full of holes) and the guy left after the injections. The doctor said it's okay I've changed my gloves and I didn't want to go to another room to do the PRP and leave you waiting. I thought well firstly you did leave me waiting, and second, you brought someone into a live theatre when you should have not entertained any visitors let alone carried out a PRP session mid-procedure! By now I knew I'd gotten myself into a bad situation. After the second extraction it was very late and the doctor told the technicians to hurry up and start inserting the grafts. I said actually no, don't hurry up, can you please do it properly. The doctor disappeared and the the technicians had to pump me full of more anesthetic as the implants were painful. They commented that the slits were closing up and they were struggling to get the grafts in deep enough. One was planting grafts on the right side and one was doing the left. I don't believe the grafts were trimmed properly either. After it was all done, it was was around midnight. We had started at 11 AM. When I looked at my results I thought this looks different. I've seen many results and there is a dense packing of grafts with the obvious clots of blood. My grafts had clumps of skin at the ends. I was also worried that a long time had elapsed since the first extraction and the placement i.e. whether the grafts would survive. After the procedure some of the technicians washed my head daily (I had the procedure on a Monday and I left on Thursday). When I was leaving for the U.K. I was told by the office manager I did not need to wear a hat or a dressing due to dust/dirt as it had been over 72 hours and the grafts had set. I was told it's best to air my head out as much as possible. I asked for a discharge report detailing the number of grafts, etc. It listed 4200. This was nonsense as I later discovered. Now - here's when things really go south. When I returned to the U.K. just over two-weeks later I developed pustules in the donor area. I was initially treated by a doctor for folliculitis, but the antibiotics had not effect. I then paid to see a private scalp dermatologist who took a swab which proved positive for MRSA. I was treated with the appropriate antibiotics and it cleared up. At this point hair started to shed. The implanted hair around the temples was the last to go. There was also hair that did not shed and did not grow either which was odd. Eventually that hair fell out after over a month. When hair started to grow around three to four months later, I saw the hair in the temple area and even the top of the head looked linear (not random) and there were bumps at the base of the hair. I was told not to panic by Dr Rana and to keep using coconut oil. Apparently it cures everything. I eventually became more and more upset and the conversations took a bizarre turn where Dr Rana insisted that I would never find a doctor as sincere as him (I have all his messages) and the other specialists advising me in the U.K. were jealous. I reminded him a sincere doctor would not lie about carrying out multiple surgeries and if someone had traveled a long distance to see him, the least he could have done was to focus on that patient and not try to juggle more than one surgery. Things came to a head when, after seeing doctors in the U.K., it emerged the placement was rushed and botched (grafts not deep enough and were not trimmed properly - this was due to the delays juggling two procedures and a rushed attempt to complete the graft placement close to midnight). There are small bumps of elevated skin over the recipient area and temples and pitted areas as well. The donor area has been "butchered" I was told. Hair was even taken from "no-go" areas. I told Dr. Rana that unless he refunded my money I'd have legal action brought against him. According to Dr. Rana there's there's a quota of negligent procedures you're allowed if you carry out a certain number of procedures that went okay - he didn't say this but I'm paraphrasing... he agreed to refund my money but after a few weeks of stalling I had a Letter of Intent sent to him and he refunded half of the money. It wasn't even about the money for me - it was more of a gesture that he's not getting away scot-free. I still wish to pursue further action against him but I'm looking at the options. Fast-forward since then - I've seen doctors at two private clinics. I've had my case and results referred to Dr. Greg Williams at the Farjo institute for comment by the London Skin and Hair Clinic (I wasn't able to see Dr Williams in person), I've seen Dr Jensen (the chap from Embarrassing Bodies), Dr Chopra at the London Dermatology Centre (I've had a few PRP sessions with him) and I've seen Dr Shahmalak (Crown Clinic). I had a recent review with Dr. Shahmalak to look at a repair session for the disaster Dr Rana calls a procedure. It looks like there's not much he can do due to the donor area being exhausted. Dr Shahmalak said the amount that had been removed did not reflect was was implanted and that he actually contacted Dr. Rana about me and another patient and the response was dismissive - along the lines of well there will always be a couple of people with problems. Yes problems do occur but my experience wasn't an unexpected problem it was pure negligence and even fraud. Here's a list of current issues a year later: Cobblestoning Pitting Ridging - scalp area raised Repeated infections - unexplained still being looked at. Never had this before. Dr Shahmalak thinks it could be a buried graft but I've yet to get this under control Recurring pain in donor area and parts of recipient area Excessive trauma in the donor area - still becomes red and inflamed even a year later It appears not even 2000 grafts were carried out let alone the 4200 I was told Non-random hair placement Hair planted in the wrong direction in right temple area I have a ton of pictures I've taken over the course of a year. Although it's hard to catch some of the things you can see in a mirror with a camera, I've tried to capture the negative results as best as I can and the London Skin and Hair Clinic took pictures whenever I went to see them. I've condensed a years-worth of events as much as I could but it's still turned out to be a long post. The next steps for me are to stop the recurring infections (priority) and dermabrasion to smooth out the scalp. I then have to have the hair in the temples lasered off and then hopefully a repair job with Dr. Shahmalak (looking doubtful now). I'm going to either use SMP or go back to a shaved head with scar camouflage. If anyone comes across Dr Rana Irfan when looking for an FUE procedure run a mile. He still maintains all the specialists I've seen in the U.K. are wrong and in-fact "envious" of him. He claims to be an IAHRS certified surgeon (yes I should have looked into this myself and not trust my "friend") when I don't believe that's the case. His website seems to suggest he's certified by everyone but the Queen of England. I'll post an update after I've seen Dr. Shahmalak following dermabrasion sessions. And by the way, this "friend" disappeared at the first sign of trouble for me. Live an learn eh. The above post is a completely factual account of what took place with my procedure. I have all communications and messages going back a year with Dr Rana Irfan. None of the claims in the legal Letter of Intent were disputed by the clinic. If Dr Rana said well I messed up, that would be one thing, but to state your an "FUE guru" on your website yet act in such a cavalier and dangerous manner with patients while disregarding essential hygiene is insane. My advice to ANYONE looking to get a hair transplant done - if in doubt, walk run away. I've spent a small fortune on specialists and treatments to heal my scalp and I'm still not even done yet. Cheers.
  12. Depends on the look you're going for. I would go for FUE if possible but you'll need to speak to someone with experience. Funny thing this hair loss business eh.. I have enough hair on my chest to make a fur coat but my poor noggin suffers so...!
  13. How do you keep your hair at the moment, I take it the scars are visible?
  14. Hi headaball. Interestingly enough when I was getting my second session done there was a guy who was getting SMP done because he had a patch of alopecia and an FUT scar he wanted to get covered up. He decided to go for the shaved close look (0.5-1mm) and have the FUT and alopecia patch covered up with SMP. I can't really say how it would look without looking at your situation but you'd need to be aware that SMP only really looks good for a shaved look so you'd need to shave your head to at least 0.5 mm or so. SMP has been used along with hair transplant procedures to give the illusion of density but that's probably left to someone with more knowledge on this. If you're saying can you cover up an FUT scar where that part of the head is shaved close anyway (for example you have long hair on top but shave the back and sides short - where the scar happens to be) then it may work as it would "blend in" with the rest of the shaved hair. Try and find people who've had SMP done for this purpose and look at their results.
  15. I saw this thread and had some thoughts: http://www.hairrestorationnetwork.com/eve/185892-mens-ink-smp-shaved-effect-nw-6-a.html This is what SMP should look like in my opinion. Keep it simple and you'll get realistic results. I had SMP carried out and I regretted it. I would have rather saved the money for longer and gotten an FUE transplant. Each to their own I guess. I said this is what SMP should look like because when I got mine done in Harley Street, I was insistent that I wanted the naturally shaved look, which does not have a ridiculously defined hairline; however, after the procedure and healing (I was told to wait a couple of weeks before judging) the end result was not as I expected. The hairline was way too sharp. I was told the hairline could be lowered adding a feathered look to it but I didn't want an even lower hairline. When you lose confidence in the practitioner you don't want them messing with your head any further. The sharp defined look is only really carried off properly with a certain amount of actual hair growth. I had mine removed actually (removed is not the right word because I've yet to see someone who has actually gone back to exactly how they were before SMP) because the hairline was too defined and not like the picture above. I'm not sure if there was any adverse effect from laser removal on existing hair that may affect how successful an FUE procedure would be if I get one done in the future (there are some reports - but not enough solid data I guess - that say there is some harm done to existing hair). My advice to anyone considering SMP 1) MAKE IT ABSOLUTELY CLEAR what kind of hairline you want. If you're going to go down the SMP route I'd advise the shaved look with a feathered or scattered hairline NOT a sharp defined hairline that I've seen people go for. Again, each to their own. If sharp is what you want, go for it. 2) Look at bumps, raises or a certain bone structure on your head. SMP is not real hair so any natural protrusions won't be covered up - in fact it may look like your hairline starts in one place but during conversations or natural head movements that cause the shape of your head to change, it may look like you have two hairlines - one defined by SMP and the other due your bump or protrusion. I don't know if that makes sense but I'm sure some people will know what I'm talking about. Define your hairline close to or around any visible bone structure/protrusion if possible. 3) Although the ink isn't injected as deep as a regular tattoo, there are still some unanswered questions/concerns about SMP. Nothing sinister that I've heard but some people may wish to look into it. Doctors that I've asked said they don't have enough data at the moment to comment. 4) Shiny heads - it DOES look odd at times if you have a "full head of hair" look (albeit shaved) but you're one of those people (like me) who's head starts shining even by looking at a spicy curry let alone even eating it, you'll get a shine "on top" of your "hair". You can use anti-chafing gels (powder gels) which are very good at reducing shine and work quite well and they do help. Just watch out if you're a shine head. Electric shavers are much better than a wet shave I find. 5) As I've said already, don't think you can just get it removed and all will be well again if you're not happy - other than the fact that laser removal is painful and you'll feel like you've had your head in a microwave for an hour, along with the throbbing and pain that brings, your scalp area that had SMP may change colour compared to the rest of your face/head. In my case it became a shade darker. The (sharp) hairline created by SMP was still distinguishable from a distance but if you got close you can see there's no hair/ink there. Unless I shave my head daily it can look odd as my natural hair around the side grows but the shade where SMP used to be can be seen. After laser removal some small dots/patches can still remain. I wasn't going to go back and have my head cooked any further. 6) Maintenance. Use an electric shaver. Also you may find you can't let your real hair grow for more than a day. Everyone is different. Some people will need to shave daily, others can let their hair grow for a couple of days. With this is mind, along with the need for anti-shine creams for some people, this will need to be a routine you'll need to get used to. The above are a few points. SMP is not for everyone. It can be a really good look for some people especially when planned carried out properly. It's not just a matter of putting dots on your head. Done right it can make you look ten years younger, but done wrong, it will make you even MORE self-conscious and look like you're wearing some sort skull cap. If I could go back, I'd stick to my natural thinning hair and not worry about maintenance. I would have saved for an FUE procedure. That's just my opinion, everyone's story is different.
  16. Thanks Benny, I think I'll call them directly instead. They have a UK 'phone number.
  17. Hi all, new to the forum. I've been researching doctors in Turkey and Dr. Koray's work stood out for me for FUE treatment. I've asked a couple of questions to the clinic via email and its website but heard nothing for a few days so wondered whether he was still practising out of Turkey, or whether he had moved? Many thanks.
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