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stilldeciding

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Everything posted by stilldeciding

  1. if you cut proscar into 8ths it will be just as effective and be only $2.50 a month, thats super cheap. anyone can afford that. your hair is important to you i presume, and itll be a worthwhile investment. good luck
  2. yup totally possible. sometimes the doc will transplant hairs there so dense as if there was no hair to begin with, as theyll likely fall out, this is a safety measure. so if ur sure they are on their way out id go for it. hopefully it doesnt recede past that too much
  3. sorry, this isnt an experienced based answer but i think its definately possible to moderate success with the right doc. the hairs i dont think will ever grow to long but thats besides the point. however, even with a hair in the white dot hair, the white dot will persist and will likely be just as visible...the white dot represents missing pigment in the skin from deep scar tissue, not the lack of follice. keep in mind this, should u ever go in for future FUE, your doc will need to be able to differentiate the BHT from native hair as if he uses that for your transplant youll be sorta screwed. if the scarring is apparent enough he'll likely be able to tell, but not guarenteed.
  4. Dr Feller, Have there been any patients as far along as the two you posted that haven't shown any noticeable improvements?
  5. but he's losing the hair not the actual graft, right? so it shouldn't be a problem if there is no bleeding? if there is no bleeding it means the graft is still intact. am i wrong? if you lose some hairs when some scabs came off, is this bad too then?
  6. that is correct, as far as i am aware...you know how minox works on some people to grow hair without messing with dht, well i assume that prp works similar in that sense, but yet completely different. it offers the hair follicles growth hormones and other "stuff" that can help hair grow, or maybe even fight back, in turn slowing down the mpb process or even reversing it. of course im not educated in it, but hope this is of help, there are plenty of posts talking about what you're asking, do a search and it will help.
  7. You can remove them via fue, which will leave scarring, and have them placed back into the donor. OR you can have them removed via laser or electrolysis, they leave no scar, and they DO work 100% in permanent hair removal, speaking from experience. gl!
  8. If nape hair was suscepticle to MPB, I would still do it IF it had a good growth/yield track record. I definately don't mind "renting" a few hairs for a softer hairline....HOWEVER, I spoke to Dr. Feller a little bit about this, and he was against the idea. Hopefully he can reply in detail and in his own words about it. It looks awesome on paper, and I am still holding out hope on it (because I really want it to be a viable option lol), but am not jumping into anything right now after talking to Dr. Feller. Hoping he reads this thread!
  9. wow luca, you definately have an issue there, luckily fixable. strongly urge them to fix it, it really is their mistake, that was just bad planning, really bad. luckily, the actual transplanted areas look GREAT, which is the most important thing, it's really dense, so there is no denying their ability of high yield, just that fact that they did not exactly plan real well in terms of placement.
  10. Bill, I think that's impossible, as the PRP is injected to the scalp, and any residue would had been washed off after 2 weeks. It's possible it sped up growth, and all those new hairs really made a difference in hiding the visible scalp, though they may be short still.
  11. Thanks for answering Dr. Feller! I only asked because in the below photo I felt, even for only 8 months, it looked very sparse...the amount of grafts. I figured that you did less than average density to cover more area, but wasn't sure. If I'm looking at it right, in the visible areas it looks like around 8-16 grafts per sqcm on average?
  12. Spex, Dr. Feller, or Fender, do you know how many grafts were planted into the frontal hairline region?
  13. definitely not until all the scabs are gone, careful that there nothing sticking up or out that you can knick.
  14. Sounds like a good plan, and well thought out. Glad to hear that you're getting good results after not so great priors, as they can be really discouraging to the point where you don't ever want to think of an ht again. ha If you're thinking of Feller for FUE, why didn't you choose him for the strip?
  15. eager to see how things are going with him, been about 9 months now?
  16. im always amazed at how fast the hair grows from 3mos - 6mos...looking real nice!
  17. nice, thanks for these. ive always been interested in how it would look after buzzing it down. are you planning on going in for more density, or saving those grafts for when you bald in the future? p.s. nice hairline design!
  18. I don't usually save links but I'll definately be on the lookout. From personal experience, my first FUE...now four years later, some hairs are still kinked/frizzy looking.
  19. Thanks for this, shock makes sense. Though it is not always temporary, I've seen some results 5-10 years down the line where those characteristics remain. If it was temporary I don't think anyone would really care, because that's such a small price to pay. I wonder what could be done to lessen the shock a graft goes through, if anything. PRP, special aftercare, anything. Also wonder if any research has been done to aide in less shock.
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