Dr. Bijan Feriduni Posted December 23, 2016 Share Posted December 23, 2016 FUE performed on a 31 year old Caucasian male with: - Norwood Type II Class N - Donor density of 80 FU/cm2 in the temporal region and 88-92 FU/cm2 in the parietal region - Hair diameter of ~60-62 µm Treatment plan: A Follicular Unit Extraction with 2200 FU to reconstruct the entire hairline in a conservative design. Performed procedure (December 12th, 2015): A Follicular Unit Extraction procedure with 2240 FU: - 427 single hair FU - 1060 double hair FU - 753 triple hair FU Extraction performed with a 0.80mm FUE punch with CIT Manual Punch Handle. No microscopic preparation of the follicular unit grafts (FUE); Parallel incisions (single, double and triple units) were made in custom-sized blades technique (~Cutting Edge blades of 0.75mm – 0.85mm) Dr. Bijan Feriduni Dr. Feriduni is a member of the Coalition of Independent Hair Restoration Physicians Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Senior Member harryforreal Posted December 23, 2016 Senior Member Share Posted December 23, 2016 Very nice work, Dr. Feriduni. Would like to see both sides of the hairline with the hair raised. The skin in photo 9 is very good. Just no evidence of trauma. Really impressive. Parallel incisions (single, double and triple units) were made in custom-sized blades technique (~Cutting Edge blades of 0.75mm – 0.85mm) Dr. Feriduni, do you feel that blades are less traumatic to the skin than implanter pens? Or that blades produce better aesthetic results? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dr. Bijan Feriduni Posted December 23, 2016 Author Share Posted December 23, 2016 Very nice work, Dr. Feriduni. Would like to see both sides of the hairline with the hair raised. The skin in photo 9 is very good. Just no evidence of trauma. Really impressive. Parallel incisions (single, double and triple units) were made in custom-sized blades technique (~Cutting Edge blades of 0.75mm – 0.85mm) Dr. Feriduni, do you feel that blades are less traumatic to the skin than implanter pens? Or that blades produce better aesthetic results? Thanks harryforreal! Unfortunately I didn't take any pictures with his hair raised. I personally believe that both blades and implanter pens cause a comparable amount of trauma to the scalp and produce similar results, all depends on the size of the implantation tool. Kind regards, Dr. B. Feriduni Dr. Feriduni is a member of the Coalition of Independent Hair Restoration Physicians Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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