Regular Member another Posted October 28, 2014 Author Regular Member Share Posted October 28, 2014 Hi, Thank you for your comments. Yes BaldingBogger you are right, this is the result of 1 session or 1 operation. http://www.hairrestorationnetwork.com/eve/174447-4000-fue-grafts-dr-maral.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Regular Member another Posted October 28, 2014 Author Regular Member Share Posted October 28, 2014 http://www.hairrestorationnetwork.com/eve/174447-4000-fue-grafts-dr-maral.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
britboy Posted October 29, 2014 Share Posted October 29, 2014 very nice...I think you should be very pleased Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Senior Member BaldingBogger Posted November 2, 2014 Senior Member Share Posted November 2, 2014 BaldingBogger, the operation was around May/2013. Following all the chronology of the thread, do you think that there would be time for a second operation with so fast results? Yes elegant there could have easily been a touch up at 11/12 months circa may 2014. The growth from that could very possibly be showing nicely by now at 5/6 month stage Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Regular Member elegant185 Posted November 2, 2014 Regular Member Share Posted November 2, 2014 I'm happy for the final result, but that's an intriguing case. Either an excellent late recovery or if repaired, an excellent fast growth after a previous poor growth. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Senior Member MikroFUE Posted November 16, 2014 Senior Member Share Posted November 16, 2014 Operation Date: April, 2013. Grade 6/7 hair loss; Hair loss pattern is between NW.6 and NW.7. Minimal donor capacity/potential should be more than 4000 grafts in the first FUE session. (if less, this is called grade 7 hair loss) This pattern of hair loss always requires at least 2 sessions for coverage of all hair loss areas with good density. 1st session: Maximum number of grafts was removed from his donors (4000 grafts) and transplanted from the front to the top area. This area is anatomically one part and should be transplanted in the first session to achieve a natural coverage. We transplanted optimum number of grafts to the front area and allocated the remaining grafts gradually decreasing in number to the middle-top areas. This operative planning strategy, transplanting the grafts from front to the top area, gives the patients more freedom for timing of their 2nd session. If we had transplanted all grafts from the front to the middle-upper parts, much better density could have been obtained over transplant area, but compelled him to come for the 2nd session much earlier because of unnatural coverage, all over the front, nothing over the upper-top. At the 2nd session more grafts will be transplanted to the upper-top-back areas and if necessary, front area density can be increased by adding some more grafts here. Preoperative donor area, and post operative day 1 picture showing planning strategy: I am the marketing representative of Maral Hair Transplant and Aesthetic Plastic Surgery Klinik in Istanbul, Turkey. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Senior Member MikroFUE Posted November 16, 2014 Senior Member Share Posted November 16, 2014 Preoperative and 18 months postoperative pictures: I am the marketing representative of Maral Hair Transplant and Aesthetic Plastic Surgery Klinik in Istanbul, Turkey. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Senior Member MikroFUE Posted November 16, 2014 Senior Member Share Posted November 16, 2014 Similar NW6 hair losses and coverage after 1st HT session (only front area was covered): I am the marketing representative of Maral Hair Transplant and Aesthetic Plastic Surgery Klinik in Istanbul, Turkey. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Senior Member MikroFUE Posted November 18, 2014 Senior Member Share Posted November 18, 2014 I think a surgeon is far better targeting a smaller area with 4000 grafts on higher Norwood patients instead of trying to spread them over the entire surface area as coverage is just too light in my opinion. I have seen some recommended surgeons do it and I question their reasoning for it. Another, Dr Maral should have just tried to hit the frontal to midsection in one surgery and then target another area with a second surgery and possibly reinforce the first surgery if necessary. A transplanted crown alone can eat up a high percentage of a donor supply and look thin. We congratulate Chrisdaw on his very accurate comment for Another's operative planning by Dr. Maral. In Addition; Another comes from Class 4 donors (live in UK) Class 4 donors: Central Asian Area (people from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Burma, Malaysia, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Iran, Azarbeijan) Features of Class 4 Donors: Donor areas may show some less capacity compared to Caucasians; - less donor area hair density, and hard, consistent subcutaneous tissues which necessitates some traction forces to remove grafts. Note: There are many exceptions. Many people from class 4 donors may show donor area characteristics with high capacity like Caucasians (class 1 or 2). Some Caucasians may show donor area characteristics like class 3 or 4 donors. 1000 grafts can carry 1000 to 3500 hairs (or hair roots, or hair follicles) depending average number of hairs per graft in a given hair transplant session (mostly depends on the donor area hair density) Another's donor areas max. capacity was 4000 grafts in the 1st session. We estimate 2500-3500 more grafts in the 2nd session, and after, there still will be sufficient number of hairs to cover the donors (he had thick donor hairs, his advantage) HT results should be compared within the same class of donor areas. I am the marketing representative of Maral Hair Transplant and Aesthetic Plastic Surgery Klinik in Istanbul, Turkey. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now