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How Low is the Strip Taken in the Back?


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  • Senior Member

Hi

 

Mine were taken at the base of the bump. You can do scalp exercises to assist with Laxity. They certainly help as I yeilded almost double for #3 than the previous 2 without doing them.

JOBI

 

1417 FUT - Dr. True

1476 FUT - Dr. True

2124 FUT - Dr. True

604 FUE - Dr. True

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My views are based on my personal experiences, research and objective observations. I am not a doctor.

 

Total - 5621 FU's uncut!

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  • Senior Member

Between the "bump" and the fleshy part of the neck on the back of the head, there is hard ridge of scalp from where the tissue is removed.

Notice: I am an employee of Dr. Paul Rose who is recommended on this community. I am not a doctor. My opinions are not necessarily those of Dr. Rose. My advice is not medical advice.

 

Dr. Rose is a member of the Coalition of Independent Hair Restoration Physicians.

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  • Senior Member

Nine out of ten times, it turns out that the best place to mark the lower border of the donor strip to be taken does in fact lie just over the level of the occipital tubercle ("bump") on the back of the head. This level corresponds to a point, below which lies around 1/3 of the dense donor hair and above which lies around 2/3 of the same. Assuming at least a couple of sessions are done and that the surgeon takes the second strip just above the first scar (removing the scar at the same time), this is usually a good point to mark this lower strip level. But there are exceptions.

Some men show evidence of thinning up from the nape of the neck. In these sometimes the strip is taken slightly higher up if there is a sufficient height of "safe" donor hair there. In each patient an experienced hair surgeon uses a great deal of judgement in choosing at which level the best hair to take is located.

The scalp below the level of that bump doesnt' have a galea layer (the layer of "gristle" that is tough and is the continuation of where the neck and forehead muscles extend over the scalp) and thus in many male patients scars placed in this lower territory have a tendency to stretch out into a wide donor scar. The other mistake that is sometimes made is to take the donor strip too high in the donor area of a man who will go on to bald down into the area where the strip was taken - which results in these transplanted hairs later being lost .

The only time I will take the donor hair below the level of the occipital tubercle is occasionally in a female patient in whom the density of the hair in this lower region is the best donor hair in terms of density and caliber of the hairs. Most women with female pattern hair loss don't have great density in the side areas of their scalp, so the great majority of the donor hair has to come from the back wall of hair. Since they wear their hair longer than men, if the scar down there is 2-3mm wide, it isn't quite as big a problem.

In some young men the hair surgeon might notice hair thinning coming up from the nape of the neck and also see the vertex (crown) in back "scooping" down pretty low, leaving a fairly narrow area of dense hair. In these men, it is important to always leave some amount of thick hair there to "shingle" down in back, so I mark off the central 2 inches of the back of the head and don't harvest in that small middle section of hair, but instead harvest two separate strips to each side of that area, where the height of donor hair is higher and the scar will be well hidden by hair above and below.

Mike Beehner, M.D.

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