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Berba11

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Posts posted by Berba11

  1. 15 minutes ago, Affectionatefail25 said:

     @Berba11Thanks for replying. Would you recommend any topical solution. I have contacted xyon. Waiting for some people who have tried it to tell me if it’s a viable solution. Are multiple hair transplants possible? 

    Don’t know how good Xyon is. I do know it’s expensive!

    Most people will have a minimum of two HT’s. This forum is littered with people who have had multiple surgeries. I’ve had two and will likely have a third within the next two years. 

    • Thanks 1
  2. 1 hour ago, Affectionatefail25 said:

    I don’t know what more to do. 

    You can try topical solutions (fin or dutasteride), or try micro-dosing. There’s also oral minoxidil to consider. 
     

    But I wouldn’t over think it. Come off the meds and see what happens. You could choose to bald gracefully and move on with life or you can seek surgery (as long as you’re prepared to potentially need multiple surgeries if hair loss continues). 
     

    You clearly have time on your side given how much hair you currently have, so no reason to panic. At the end of the day, it’s just hair. You have plenty of options - none of which are worth stressing over. 

    • Thanks 1
  3. 5 hours ago, aceman said:

    So that's why I am considering Turkey because of its excellent reputation in general.  

    A very undeserved reputation - most options in Turkey are terrible, with only a small number of clinics doing HT work to a higher level. 
     

    Personally if you’ve had a couple of successful FUT’s and now want to finish the job a bit cheaper, I’d be looking at someone like Dr Loarwong in Thailand. In terms of a very experienced surgeon with lots of independent reviews producing very high level work at a budget price, I’m struggling to think of a better alternative. 

  4. 5 hours ago, Jamiebaldie said:

    Greetings to all,

    I have been diligently researching hair transplant clinics for some time now and find myself in a state of indecision regarding the selection process. I would greatly appreciate recommendations for reputable establishments on a global scale to aid in my decision-making process. Thank you in advance for your assistance

    If you’re asking for a list of worldwide reputable surgeons then there’s a big recommended” list at the top of the forum to browse through. 
     

    If you want more specific advice then some photos showing your current hair loss as well as info such as age, location, family history of hair loss and budget will help us to start narrowing down the options a bit more. 

    • Like 1
  5. 3 hours ago, Ivan Ivanov said:

    Thanks for the replies guys hope you are right ❤️
    Stay healthy

    Thank you for your reply sir

    Are you sure that alcohol can't burn the grafts🙄🙄 and is it normal for my hair to start falling after the 10th day even almost all my newly grafted hair has fallen and today is only day 18? 🙏🙏

    Your question has been answered already. The answer isn’t suddenly going to change mate!

    If your shampoo could “burn the grafts”, then every hair on your body that it comes into contact with it would theoretically burn, too. Unless you’re now smooth as a newborn baby all over, you’ll be ok!

    • Like 1
  6. 1 hour ago, Rick Jackson said:

    If he added verteporfin to the donor area to get donor regrowth it would be a cure .

    Honestly… a lot of people in this thread need to calm down and massively lower their expectations. 
     

    We have no idea if verteporfin will work in the way we hope it will yet, let alone to the levels required to start talking about “cures” and “limitless donor areas”.

    We have a tiny, tiny amount of encouraging evidence that warrants further investigation in both human and non-human animal cases. And that’s about where we are - no further. 
     

    It’s going to take a long time before we know with any certainty if there are testable and demonstrable benefits from using vert in HT patients, and an even longer way away from widespread adoption among surgeons. 

    • Like 2
  7. Amazing how quickly the hairline suddenly looks spot on. I know there's more extractions and refinements to come in the next session, but just getting the hairline position to a more suitable place and with a more natural widows peak shape has made a dramatic different to the balance of everything.

  8. 1 hour ago, jmac said:

    because once travel and accommodation etc is factored in (I’d probably stay in Bangkok for 2 weeks to allowed the initial healing to happen), the total cost will be closer to £7500-£8000.

    A return flight to Bangkok is probably going to be around £600-800 depending on the time of year, and you could cut your post-op stay down to no more than a week. Accommodation costs can be as expensive or as cheap as you like in Bangkok and food is super cheap, too. You should easily be able to keep things at no more than £7.5K.

    Your best UK options are going to be at least £3 per graft, so a 3K graft surgery will put you decently above your estimated costs for surgery in Thailand. Same deal in Europe really. The better options are going to be starting around a similar price point, from 3-4EUR per graft minimum.

    FUT tends to be cheaper than FUE, so you may find some savings to be had with surgeons/clinics that offer both options, and 3-3.5 grafts from a strip surgery is worthwhile (you want to get as much out of a strip as possible ideally).

    1 hour ago, jmac said:

    I’d be willing to spend that kind of cash if I could get some assurance of the kind of density I’d like.

    Unfortunately this is a gamble we all take when going for elective surgeries. The best we can do is mitigate risk as much as possible by carefully selecting surgeons. Dr Laorwong is a very good and experienced surgeon indeed, so you'd be mitigating the risks of a poor outcome by choosing him. But all top doctors have poorer cases within their portfolio nevertheless.

    • Like 1
  9. Donor area will hopefully improve over time, but the small concentrated area that they took grafts from is pretty poor in my opinion. They should be extracting more homogenously across the entire donor, using the sides as well. It's a bit odd that they didn't address your midscalp as well, unless this has been planned as a two-step surgery?

    Who was the clinic?

  10. 51 minutes ago, LondonGirl2024 said:

    @Berba11 @Gatsby @jjalay @HairFunk hey guys….. I had my FUT HT on Monday with Dr Ted Miln…. I might do a post in a few days depending on how I feel as I have a bit of swelling and the stitches are absolutely killing me lol but I can’t believe I actually did it 😊😊😊

    Well done! I hope everything goes well for you. When you feel up to it, it would definitely be great to see your journey documented on the forum. I think you'd be one of the first Dr Ted Miln cases on the forum, and certainly the first female case.

    • Like 1
  11. 15 minutes ago, Reecee said:

    When they did mine they left me with the slits unfilled overnight then did the insertions the next day. I'm not sure if this was their standard procedure or due to them being too busy to complete the transplant on the same day. They were very busy around the time of my transplant 

    This has been standard practice for years at Eugenix. Their surgeries do seem to take longer in general (I speak from personally experience as well), and to their credit their techs will slow right down or stop implantation if a patient is oozing a bit too much. One of the advantages of doing slits first is that you aren't committed to having all your grafts implanted in the same day if there are issues like excess oozing etc, as slits can remain open for up to 72 hours.

  12. 23 hours ago, Lenzman said:

    Do people really fall for this type of marketing? 

     

    100%, for the simple reason that 99.9% of prospective HT patients know nothing substantial about what good hair restoration requires and looks like, and there's no independent body that sets a clear standard for what passes as acceptable work and holds surgeons accountable to that standard.

    • Like 3
  13. 27 minutes ago, deadman said:

    Thanks for insight, are you just talking about frontal hairline? If yes, to fix it, do they like do repair HT in which they reposition grafts? Or Extract more grafts from the back?

    I'm talking about that entire 2cm strip of hairline. There's two surgical approaches to fixing a hairline:

    1. Implant more grafts in front of the problem grafts in order to hide previous bad work.

    2. Punch out all of the bad grafts, raising the hairline over the course of two or three session, before rebuilding the hairline in a more natural way.

    I think in your case you need the second option, because trying to camouflage the current hairline will be difficult as your current hairline looks too low to begin with (so putting more grafts in front of it will be a problem), and virtually all of the grafts they've used are angled poorly meaning they won't blend as well with newly implanted 'good' grafts. Furthermore, trying to camouflage the hairline will require taking more grafts from the donor, whereas punching out the hairline means you can reuse those grafts further back, and then use a much smaller number of soft single grafts to rebuild the new hairline.

    Here's a case from start to finish to give you an idea:

    And here's another case from this week:

     

    • Like 2
  14. 39 minutes ago, patronovski said:

    Only HT patients can see.

    And even then, only if we're looking at zoomed in pictures and trying to find any evidence of extraction! @track_rat- everything here looks clean as a whistle. No evidence of surgery at all, and I say that as someone who needs to get a better hobby than looking at bloke's heads on the internet everyday!

    • Like 1
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