Posts Tagged ‘Planning’
Avoiding Pitfalls in Planning a Hair Transplant (part 2)
Patient Assessment
Donor Supply
In performing a hair transplant, the physician must balance the patient?s present and future needs for hair with the present and future availability of the donor supply. It is well known that one?s balding pattern progresses over time. What is less appreciated is that the donor zone may change as well.  Â
The patient?s donor supply depends upon a number of factors including the physical dimensions of the permanent zone, scalp laxity, donor density, hair characteristics, and most importantly, the degree of miniaturization in the donor area – since this is a window into the future stability of the donor supply.
The size of the donor area is determined by both its width (height) and its length. When assessing the potential width of the donor area, doctors usually assess the lowermost point that the balding will reach, i.e. the top part of the permanent zone. However, it is equally important to pay attention to the inferior margin as well. It is common for the hair to thin significantly at the nape of the neck as a person ages, producing an “ascending hairline.” Since this can significantly diminish the width of the donor area, any evidence that this process may occur should be taken into account in the planning. Loss of the temporal points is another process that has a significant impact on the donor supply. Not only does it foreshorten the potential length of the donor strip but it often portends very significant baldness.  Â
Scalp laxity is another variable that affects the amount of available donor hair. Very tight scalps significantly limit the amount of donor hair that can be removed through strip harvesting. The constraint imposed by a tight scalp is not always apparent in the first session, but can plague the hair restoration down the line; therefore, it should be evaluated carefully in the initial patient assessment. A very loose scalp can present its own set of problems, as patients with very loose scalps often heal with widened donor scars. [18]  Â
The average donor density of a Caucasian is about 225 hairs/cm2. This can easily be measured using a hand-held instrument called a densitometer. (2) When the density of a Caucasian is below 180, a hair transplant should be undertaken with great caution. In this author?s opinion, when the maximum donor density is below 150/hair mm2, a person should generally not be transplanted, as there will not be enough donor hair to make the procedure cosmetically worthwhile and the risk of a visible donor scar is too great. (3) Exceptions would be an older person with very limited expectations and in races where the normal density is lower (i.e. Asians and Africans).Â
Hair characteristics, particularly hair shaft diameter, are as important as the absolute number of hairs in determining the outcome of a procedure. The amount of transplantable hair is related to both the number of movable hairs (determined by the size of the donor area, scalp laxity and donor density), multiplied by the hair shaft cross sectional area. Since each hair in a person with coarse hair can have over 5 times the volume as a person with fine hair, the estimate (or actual measurement) of hair shaft diameter is important in determining the overall donor supply. Â
Miniaturization, the progressive diminution of hair shaft diameter and length (the result of the action of DHT on the hair follicle) produces thinning on the front, top and crown of the scalp and is the hallmark of androgenetic alopecia. But the back and sides of the scalp can miniaturize as well and when a significant portion of a patient?s donor area is miniaturized, the hair in this area can be rendered useless for a hair transplant. (Figures 1 and 2)
This condition, called diffuse unpatterned hair loss (or DUPA), is the most common type of hair loss seen in women and it is not uncommon in men. It goes without saying, that every patient, male or female, in whom a transplant is being considered, should be evaluated for donor miniaturization using densitometry to make sure that the donor hair to be transplanted is stable.Â
Recipient Demand
One should never assume that a person?s hair loss is stable. Hair loss tends to progress over time. Even patients who show a good response to finasteride will eventually lose more hair. It is always best to consider the reasonable worst-case scenario when assessing how bald the patient may become, so that the finite donor hair can be allocated properly. Although the Norwood classification is very helpful in staging the hair loss, it doesn?t take into account actual scalp dimensions. Just like the donor site, the recipient area should actually be measured. Even within a single Norwood class, there is a vast difference between a patient with a narrow forehead and one with a very broad head with respect to the actual surface that needs to be covered, and thus the number of grafts required for the restoration.Â
Designing the HairlineÂ
Hairline Position
In the adolescent, the hairline sits just above the upper brow crease formed by the upper border of the frontalis muscle directly below it. The position of the normal adult male hairline is approximately 1.5cm above this crease at the midline). A common error is to place the newly transplanted hairline at the adolescent position, rather than one appropriate for an adult. Although the younger patient, first experiencing hair loss, may put considerable pressure on the doctor to place hair in the lower position, the physician should not yield to this demand.Â
Under normal circumstances, as a patient ages, his density decreases and the natural hairline will move back somewhat. However, a transplanted hairline is immutable. Therefore, when the transplanted patient continues to thin or bald (which he invariable will) the fixed low frontal hairline will begin to look out of place, since it is natural for a person with decreased overall hair volume to have a slightly receded hairline, rather than one that is still in the adolescent position.Â
Hairline Shape
A similar logic applies when choosing the shape of the hairline. As a male passes from adolescence to adulthood, his broad, flat hairline evolves into a more tapered shape with some recession at the temples. A persistent low, broad hairline is enjoyed by those who also maintain their adolescent density. This situation is not present in those who are suffering from androgenetic alopeica; therefore, a transplanted flat hairline will not “age well” over time and will look unnatural as the patient?s overall density decreases and particularly as the crown begins to thin.Â
If a person is older, has maintained a high donor density, and has a small risk of extensive hair loss, a broader hairline is possible. However, this is not this case for the person who is starting to bald at a young age, since he has a significant risk of extensive baldness and, more importantly, the extent of his future hair loss can not be known at the time the surgery is planned.Â
Graft Distribution
The nuances of graft distribution and the multitude of problems that result from distributing grafts improperly are beyond the scope of this writing; however, there are two main but related themes that the hair transplant surgeon should be cognizant of when deciding where to place grafts. The first is to set a target area of coverage that takes into account the patient?s future balding pattern, as well as, his total donor hair supply. The second is to forward weight the grafts, rather than distributing them evenly over the top of the scalp.
Extent of Coverage
The problem of deciding how much bald scalp a hair transplant should cover can be illustrated as follows. As an example, take a patient whose total number of follicular unit grafts available to harvest is around 5,500. The front part of the scalp has a surface area of about 50 cm2. The top or mid-scalp has an area of about 150 cm2 and the vertex or crown about 175 cm2. However, the size of the bald crown can vary dramatically depending upon the extent of hair loss, reaching over 200cm2 in a Norwood Class VII patient.Â
If the front and top of the scalp were transplanted using all of the patients donor hair, the transplanted density would be only 5,500grafts/200cm2 or 27.5 grafts/cm2 (less than 1/3 the density of the patient?s original hair). If the crown were covered as well, that would be 5,500 grafts/400cm2 or 12.5 grafts/cm2 (only 15% the density of the patient?s original hair). Using various manipulations, such as creating different densities in different parts of the scalp, a skilled surgeon can make 1/3 of the overall density look like a substantial amount of hair. However, working with only 15% of the original density, can make the job of creating a natural look significantly more difficult, if not impossible.   Â
The way to avoid having a hair transplant with a look that is too thin, or see-through, is to limit the extent of coverage to the front and mid-scalp until an adequate donor supply and a limited balding pattern can be reasonably assured - an assurance that can only come after the patient ages. Until that time, it is best to avoid adding coverage to the crown. Â
Another problem with transplanting the crown early is that as the crown expands additional hair will be needed to follow the expanding area of baldness outward, just to keep the first hair transplant looking natural. This may require considerable amounts of hair that will not be available to cover the front and mid-scalp if that were too bald as well. On the other hand, if the hair transplant was limited to the vertex transition point or VTP (see figure above), the restoration would look natural without further surgery no matter how far the hair loss in the crown progressed. The reason is that the front and top of the scalp represent a complete cosmetic unit, with the VTP as the natural posterior boundary – so it is natural for hair to cover this region of the scalp but not beyond. Â
Density Gradients
Another way for surgeons to prevent a thin, see-through look is to avoid distributing the grafts evenly over the transplanted area. It goes without saying that only 1-hair grafts should be used at the hairline, with larger grafts behind them, but there are additional ways to produce the gradations of density to mimic the way hair grows in nature. Specifically, the greatest density should be in the front part of the scalp (shown in brown) and particularly in the frontal forelock area (shown in dark brown).
The greater density in the front of the scalp forelock area can be created in two ways; by placing the recipient sites closer together in this location and by using larger follicular units in the area (i.e. 3- and 4- hair units rather than 1s and 2s). These techniques may be use in combination to achieved greater density but, as will be discussed in the following section, if done to excess, may compromise growth. Â
Summary
Follicular unit transplantation is a powerful hair restoration technique that allows the surgeon to create natural hair patterns and produce results that mimic nature. The success of the procedure depends greatly on proper patient selection, accurately assessing the patient?s donor supply, and distributing the grafts in a way that is appropriate for a person who will continue to age and eventually thin over time. With thoughtful planning, major mistakes can be avoided and our patients will be able to achieve the full benefit of this remarkable procedure.Â
References
1. Orentreich N: Autografts in alopecias and other selected dermatological conditions. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 83:463-479, 1959.
2. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Szaniawski W, Halperin A: Follicular Transplantation. Intl J Aesthetic Restorative Surgery 1995; 3: 119-32.
3. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR: Follicular Transplantation: Patient Evaluation and Surgical Planning. Dermatol Surg 1997; 23: 771-84.
4. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR: The Aesthetics of Follicular Transplantation. Dermatol Surg 1997; 23: 785-99.
5. Gandelman M, et al: Light and electron microscopic analysis of controlled injury to follicular unit grafts. Dermatol Surg 2000; 26(1): 31.\
6. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Rashid N, Shiell R: The art of repair in surgical hair restoration – Part I: Basic repair strategies. Dermatol Surg 2002; 28(9): 783-94.
7. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Rashid N, Shiell R: The art of repair in surgical hair restoration – Part II: The tactics of repair. Dermatol Surg 2002; 28(10): 873-93.
8. Bernstein RM, Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation. In: Robinson JK, Hanke CW, Siegel DM, Sengelmann RD, editors: Surgery of the Skin, Elsevier Mosby, London UK. 2005.
9. Unger WP, Shapiro R. Hair Transplantation. New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc. 2004.
10. Bernstein RM, Rassman, WR. Follicular Unit Transplantation. In: Haber RS, Stough DB, editors: Hair Transplantation, Chapter 12. Elsevier Saunders, 2006: 91-97.
11. Norwood OT. Male pattern baldness: classification and incidence. So. Med. J 1975; 68:1359-1365.
12. Haas AF, Grekin RC: Antibiotic prophylaxis in dermatologic surgery. J Am Acad Dermatol 1995; 32: 155-76.
13. Otley CC. Perioperative evaluation and management in dermatologic surgery. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006; 54: 119-27.
14. Gandelman M, Bellio R, Barretto M: Beta-blockers and local anesthetics with vasoconstrictors: A dangerous association. Intl J Aesthetic Restorative Surgery 1995; 3 (2): 143-45.
15. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR: Limiting epinephrine in large hair transplant sessions. Hair Transplant Forum International 2000; 10(2): 39-42.
16. Skidmore RA, Patterson JD, Tomsick, RS: Local anesthetics. Dermatol Surg 1996; 22:511-522.
17. Phillips KA, Menard W: Suicidality in body dysmorphic disorder: A prospective study. Am J Psychiatry, 2006; 163:1280-82.Â
18. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR. The scalp laxity paradox. Hair Transplant Forum International 2002; 12(1): 9-10.
Dr. Bernstein is Clinical Professor of Dermatology at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in New York. He is recognized world wide for pioneering Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation. Dr. BernsteinÂ?s hair restoration center in Manhattan is devoted to the treatment of hair loss using his state-of-the-art hair transplant techniques.
Avoiding Pitfalls in Planning a Hair Transplant (part 1)
Although many technical advances have been made in the field of surgical hair restoration over the past decade, particularly with the widespread adoption of follicular transplantation, many problems remain. The majority revolve around doctors recommending surgery for patients who are not good candidates. The most common reasons that patients should not proceed with surgery are that they are too young and that their hair loss pattern is too unpredictable. Young persons also have expectations that are typically too high – often demanding the density and hairline of a teenager. Many people who are in the early stages of hair loss should simply be treated with medications, rather than being rushed to go under the knife. And some patients are just not mature enough to make level-headed decisions when their problem is so emotional.
In general, the younger the patient, the more cautious the practitioner should be to operate, particularly if the patient has a family history of Norwood Class VII hair loss, or diffuse un-patterned alopecia.
Problems also occur when the doctor fails to adequately evaluate the patient?s donor hair supply and then does not have enough hair to accomplish the patient?s goals. Careful measurement of a patient?s density and other scalp characteristics will allow the surgeon to know exactly how much hair is available for transplantation and enable him/her to design a pattern for the restoration that can be achieved within those constraints.
In all of these situations, spending a little extra time listening to the patient?s concerns, examining the patient more carefully and then recommending a treatment plan that is consistent with what actually can be accomplished, will go a long way towards having satisfied patients. Unfortunately, scientific advances will improve only the technical aspects of the hair restoration process and will do little to insure that the procedure will be performed with the right planning or on the appropriate patient.
Five-year View
The improvement in surgical techniques that have enabled an ever increasing number of grafts to be placed into ever smaller recipient sites had nearly reached its limit and the limitations of the donor supply remain the major constraint for patients getting back a full head of hair. Despite the great initial enthusiasm of follicular unit extraction, a technique where hair can be harvested directly from the donor scalp (or even the body) without a linear scar, this procedure has added relatively little towards increasing the patient?s total hair supply available for a transplant. The major breakthrough will come when the donor supply can be expanded though cloning. Although some recent progress had been made in this area (particularly in animal models) the ability to clone human hair is at least 5 to 10 years away.
Key Issues
1. The greatest mistake a doctor can make when treating a patient with hair loss is to perform a hair transplant on a person that is too young, as expectations are generally very high and the pattern of future hair loss unpredictable.
2. Chronic sun exposure over one?s lifetime has a much more significant negative impact on the outcome of the hair transplant than peri-operative sun exposure.
3. A bleeding diathesis, significant enough to impact the surgery, can be generally picked up in the patient?s history; however OTC medications often go unreported (such as non-steroidals) and should be asked for specifically.
4. Depression is possibly the most common psychiatric disorder encountered in patient?s seeking hair transplantation, but it is also a common symptom of those persons experiencing hair loss. The doctor must differentiate between a reasonable emotional response to balding and a depression that requires psychiatric counseling.
5. In performing a hair transplant, the physician must balance the patient?s present and future needs for hair with the present and future availability of the donor supply. It is well known that one?s balding pattern progresses over time. What is less appreciated is that the donor zone may change as well.
6. The patient?s donor supply depends upon a number of factors including the physical dimensions of the permanent zone, scalp laxity, donor density, hair characteristics, and most importantly, the degree of miniaturization in the donor area – since this is a window into the future stability of the donor supply.
7. Patients with very loose scalps often heal with widened donor scars.
8. One should never assume that a person?s hair loss is stable. Hair loss tends to progress over time. Even patients who show a good response to finasteride will eventually lose more hair.
9. The position of the normal adult male hairline is approximately 1.5 cm above the upper brow crease. Avoid placing the newly transplanted hairline at the adolescent position, rather than one appropriate for an adult.
10. A way to avoid having a hair transplant with a look that is too thin is to limit the extent of coverage to the front and mid-scalp until an adequate donor supply and a limited balding pattern can be reasonably assured – an assurance that can only come after the patient ages. Until that time, it is best to avoid adding coverage to the crown.
Introduction
Hair Transplantation has been available as a treatment for hair loss for over 40 years. [1]
Through a majority of that time, hair transplantation was characterized by the use of plugs, slit grafts, flaps and mini-micro grafts. Although these were the best tools available to physicians at the time, they were incapable of producing consistently natural results.
With the introduction of Follicular Unit Transplantation (FUT) in 1995, doctors were finally able to produce these natural results. [2] But the mere capability to produce them did not necessarily ensure that these natural results would actually be achieved. The FUT procedure presented new challenges to the hair restoration surgeon and only when the procedure was properly planned and perfectly executed, would the patient truly benefit from the power of this new technique.[3]
The ability of follicular unit grafts to mimic nature soon produced results that were completely undetectable. This is the hallmark of Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation. [4] Of equal importance, however, is hair conservation – the one to one correspondence between what is harvested from the donor area and what ultimately grows in the recipient scalp. Since a finite donor supply is the main constraint in hair transplantation, the preservation of hair is a fundamental aspect of every technique. However, unlike the older procedures that used large grafts, the delicate follicular units are easily traumatized and very susceptible to desiccation, making follicular unit transplantation procedures, involving thousands of grafts, particularly challenging. [5]
As of this writing, the vast majority of hair transplants performed in the United States use Follicular Unit Transplant techniques. Due to limited space, this review will focus on only this technique and not on the older procedures. Nor will it focus on Follicular Unit Extraction, since this technique is still evolving and the ways to avoid the major pitfalls of this procedure are still being worked out and a subject onto itself. As the title suggests, this paper will focus on the prevention of the various problems encountered in FUT, rather than its treatment – an equally important subject, but one that has already been covered in an extensive review. [6, 7]
For those not familiar with Follicular Unit Transplantation, there is a concise review of the topic in the dermatology text Surgery of the Skin [8]. For more detailed information, several hair transplant textbooks have sections devoted to this technique. [9, 10]
The most common types of problems that occur in FUT procedures can be grouped into two broad categories; those involving errors in planning the hair transplant and those caused by errors in surgical technique. Of the two, errors in planning often lead to far more serious consequences for the patient and will be the subject of this paper.
Patient Selection
Age
The single greatest mistake a doctor can make when treating a patient with hair loss is performing a hair transplant on a person that is too young. Although, there is no specific age that can serve as a cut off (since this will vary from person to person), understanding the problems associated with performing hair restoration in young persons can help the physician in deciding when surgery may be appropriate. Getting it wrong can literally ruin a young person?s life.
When someone is beginning to lose hair in their teens or early 20s, there is a significant chance that he (or she) may become extensively bald later in life and that the donor area may eventually thin and become see-through over time. Although miniaturization (decreased hair shaft diameter) in the donor area is an early sign that this may occur, and can be picked up using densitometry, these changes may not be apparent when a person is still young.
If a person were to become very bald (become a Norwood Class 6 or a Class 7) then he would often not have enough hair to cover his crown. A transplanted scalp with a thin or balding crown is a pattern acceptable for an adult, but totally unsuitable for a person in his twenties. [11] In addition, if the donor area were to thin over time, the donor scar might become visible if the hair were worn short – a style that is much more common in people who are young.
Expectations
This subject is very closely related to age. For surgical hair restoration to be successful, expectations must match what can actually be accomplished. The expectations of a young person are usually to return to the look they had as a teenager; namely to have a broad, flat hairline and to have all of the density they had only a few years before.
The problem is that a hair transplant neither creates more hair (and therefore can?t increase overall density) nor prevents further hair loss (so the pattern must be appropriate as the person ages). But since receded temples and a thin crown is not an acceptable look for a young person, the surgery should best be postponed in a person in whom this is not acceptable. As a person ages, he often becomes more realistic and is happy with what a hair transplant can actually achieve. And, over time, if a person?s donor area proves to be stable and his hair loss limited, more ambitious goals can be attained.
Chronic Sun Exposure
Although it is common wisdom to avoid sunburns after a hair transplant, in fact, significant chronic sun exposure over one?s lifetime has a much more significant negative impact on the outcome of the hair transplant then peri-operative sun exposure.
Actinic damage alters the collagen and elastic fibers so that the grafts are not grasped as securely and the alteration to the vasculature decreases the ability of the recipient tissue to support the transplantation of a large number of grafts. Even with the very small recipient sites used in follicular unit transplantation, making sites too close can result in a compromised blood supply and result in poor growth.
Another issue is that a hair transplant will cover areas of sun damage and make cancer detection more difficult. When the actinic related growths are finally treated, the involved sections of the hair transplant will be destroyed.
The best approach in a person with significant sun damage is to first treat the entire scalp aggressively with 5-flurouracil to remove all of the pre-cancerous lesions before hair transplant is contemplated. One should wait at least 6-12 months after the treatment for the scalp to completely heal, as the tissue will be more friable during this period. Although this treatment can set the surgery back a year or more, it will result in better graft survival and less problems with future skin cancer detection.
Medical Conditions and Medications
Although not necessarily an absolute contraindication to surgery, a number of medical conditions make the follicular unit hair transplant procedure more problematic and need to be taken into account. Whenever significant medical conditions are present, it is always prudent to obtain medical clearance from the patient?s primary care physician or appropriate specialist.
Because the scalp is quite vascular, and FUT procedures involve a large surgical team, patients that are known to have blood born pathogens, such as HIV and Hepatitis B and C, pose some increased risk to the staff, despite the fact that universal precautions are used. It is useful if the team is aware of the medical histories of hair transplant patients so that they can proceed with a higher degree of alert when necessary.
In an HIV positive patient, it is important to make certain that the patient?s immune status is adequate, so that the patient does not have a greater risk of infection. In patient?s with Hepatitis, it is important to assess their liver function so that the dosing of medications is appropriate.
Patients with diabetes mellitus may be at greater risk of having a peri-operative infection. In this case the normal aseptic conditions that most hair transplants are performed under might be changed to a modified sterile technique (modified in that it is difficult to prep the scalp). This should also be considered in patients with cardiac valvular disease, implanted devices and others in whom bacterial seeding might have more severe consequences. Antibiotic coverage should also be administered in high risk individuals, although it is not needed in routine hair restoration procedures. [12]
A bleeding diathesis, significant enough to impact the surgery, can be generally picked up in the patient?s history; however medications often go under the radar and should be asked for specifically. Patient?s often don?t think to report taking aspirin and this must be asked about as well as other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications. Plavix, in particular can significantly increase bleeding during the procedure. Alcohol, of course increases bleeding as well. [13]
One should make adjustments in a patient?s anti-coagulant medication in conjunction with his/her cardiologist or regular physician. As a general rule, one should stop anti-platelet medications one week prior to the hair transplant, but the interval will vary depending upon the specific drug, the size of the procedure, and the importance of the medication to the patient?s health. They can be resumed three days after the procedure. If the anticoagulants cannot be stopped, it may be reasonable to proceed with a smaller session.
Since epinephrine is used in most hair restoration procedures, if a person has a history of arrhythmias or other cardiac disease that could be exacerbated by epinephrine, medical clearance from the patient?s primary care doctor, or cardiologist, should be obtained. Epinephrine can also interact with broad-beta blocking agents such as propranolol, causing a hypertensive crisis; therefore, it is best to have the patient switch to a selective beta-blocker for the surgery. [14]
A number of manipulations can be used during the procedure to control bleeding and decrease the need for epinephrine. Among the most useful, is to scatter the recipient sites broadly over the area to be transplanted (allowing the extrinsic pathway to begin coagulation) and then filling in the areas with additional sites when the bleeding has subsided. [15]
If patients have a history of seizures, it is important that they do not discontinue their medication for the procedure and that medical clearance is obtained. One should also remember that otherwise normal patients can have a vaso-vagal episode during the procedure; particularly during the administration of the local anesthetic. This can be avoided by immediately placing the patient in Trendelenberg as soon as the patient complains of nausea or begins to sweat, or look pale.
A patient should be monitored with a pulse oximiter if a significant amount of sedatives or other respiratory depressants are used. The patient should be monitored closely to be sure that local anesthetics are administered in safe amounts and that the warning signs of lidocaine overdose are well known to all members of the surgical team. [16]
Finally, it is helpful to have a pre-printed summary of all the medications and their doses commonly used during the procedure. This can be given to the patient?s regular physician when seeking medical clearance.
Psychological Factors
Hair loss can take a psychological toll on a person?s self-esteem and cause considerable emotional distress. When a person has underlying psychiatric issues, the impact can be more severe and, therefore, management of hair loss considerably more difficult. It is important to identify these problems as well as other psychological factors that may play a role in a patient?s ability to clearly understand both the hair restoration process and its anticipated outcome.
In some cases, counseling can be done in conjunction with hair restoration, but often it should precede treatment, especially when surgery is contemplated. It is prudent to obtain clearance for surgery from a psychiatrist or clinical psychologist when there is a history of mental illness, or when it is suspected at the time of the consultation.
A number of psychiatric conditions are particularly relevant to the successful outcome of a hair transplant. These include Trichotillomania, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), Body Dysmorphic Syndrome (BDS), and Depression.
Trichotillomania is a relatively common condition characterized by the persistent urge to pull out one?s hair. It most commonly involves scalp hair, but can also involve the eyelashes, facial hair or other body hair. It often results in bald patches and can be identified by short hairs in the affected area that are not long enough to grasp. Active trichitollomania on any part of the body is an obvious contraindication to a hair transplant, but if a person has a history of this condition, the doctor should also be cautious and only consider surgery if the therapist is confident that the condition has little chance of recurring.
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a condition characterized by recurrent, intrusive thoughts (obsessions) and related behaviors (compulsions) which attempt to neutralize the anxiety or stress caused by the obsessions. In consultation, the OCD patient often asks a litany of questions and often asks the next question before listening to the answer to previous one. OCD patients are extremely difficult to satisfy and even in a very successful hair transplant can focus on a minor imperfection seeming oblivious to the good overall result.
Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is a mental disorder that involves a distorted image of one?s body. The person is extremely critical of their physical self, despite the fact there may be no actual defect. It should be obvious that patients with BDD will not be satisfied with a hair transplant, or other forms of cosmetic procedures, and the condition is best treated by a psychiatrist rather than a surgeon. Another note of caution is that patients with BDD have a much higher suicide rate than the general population, even greater than patients with depression. [17]
Depression is possibly the most common psychiatric disorder encountered in patient?s seeking hair transplantation, but it is also a common symptom of those experiencing hair loss. The doctor must differentiate between a reasonable emotional response to balding and a depression that requires psychiatric counseling. It is important to realize that a hair transplant will be ineffective in curing a medical depression and unfulfilled expectations may lead to a worsening of the condition.
References
1. Orentreich N: Autografts in alopecias and other selected dermatological conditions. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 83:463-479, 1959.
2. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Szaniawski W, Halperin A: Follicular Transplantation. Intl J Aesthetic Restorative Surgery 1995; 3: 119-32.
3. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR: Follicular Transplantation: Patient Evaluation and Surgical Planning. Dermatol Surg 1997; 23: 771-84.
4. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR: The Aesthetics of Follicular Transplantation. Dermatol Surg 1997; 23: 785-99.
5. Gandelman M, et al: Light and electron microscopic analysis of controlled injury to follicular unit grafts. Dermatol Surg 2000; 26(1): 31.\
6. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Rashid N, Shiell R: The art of repair in surgical hair restoration – Part I: Basic repair strategies. Dermatol Surg 2002; 28(9): 783-94.
7. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Rashid N, Shiell R: The art of repair in surgical hair restoration – Part II: The tactics of repair. Dermatol Surg 2002; 28(10): 873-93.
8. Bernstein RM, Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation. In: Robinson JK, Hanke CW, Siegel DM, Sengelmann RD, editors: Surgery of the Skin, Elsevier Mosby, London UK. 2005.
9. Unger WP, Shapiro R. Hair Transplantation. New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc. 2004.
10. Bernstein RM, Rassman, WR. Follicular Unit Transplantation. In: Haber RS, Stough DB, editors: Hair Transplantation, Chapter 12. Elsevier Saunders, 2006: 91-97.
11. Norwood OT. Male pattern baldness: classification and incidence. So. Med. J 1975; 68:1359-1365.
12. Haas AF, Grekin RC: Antibiotic prophylaxis in dermatologic surgery. J Am Acad Dermatol 1995; 32: 155-76.
13. Otley CC. Perioperative evaluation and management in dermatologic surgery. J Am Acad Dermatol 2006; 54: 119-27.
14. Gandelman M, Bellio R, Barretto M: Beta-blockers and local anesthetics with vasoconstrictors: A dangerous association. Intl J Aesthetic Restorative Surgery 1995; 3 (2): 143-45.
15. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR: Limiting epinephrine in large hair transplant sessions. Hair Transplant Forum International 2000; 10(2): 39-42.
16. Skidmore RA, Patterson JD, Tomsick, RS: Local anesthetics. Dermatol Surg 1996; 22:511-522.
17. Phillips KA, Menard W: Suicidality in body dysmorphic disorder: A prospective study. Am J Psychiatry, 2006; 163:1280-82.
18. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR. The scalp laxity paradox. Hair Transplant Forum International 2002; 12(1): 9-10.
Dr. Bernstein is Clinical Professor of Dermatology at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in New York. He is recognized world wide for pioneering Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation. Dr. Bernstein?s hair restoration center in Manhattan is devoted to the treatment of hair loss using his state-of-the-art hair transplant techniques.
Planning for a Hair Transplant: What to Expect During the First Session
Planning for a Hair Transplant: What to Expect During the First Session
In our experience, patient expectations are most often influenced by the patient’s age, stage of hair loss, and its rapidity. The young patient (those in their 20’s) with the memory of their adolescent hairline and density still clear in their minds, are also the ones most susceptible to rapid, significant hair loss and are the patients that need the most time in the education and planning process. Other factors include the person’s social situation (such as how he is perceived by significant others), and how he has been dealing with his hair loss (such as using a hair piece or the continuous wearing of a hat). It is incumbent upon the physician to educate the patient and set his expectations correctly, or the patient may never be satisfied.
The patient should not be led to believe that hair restoration surgery will restore what has been lost. In the ideal situation, hair restoration surgery should maintain the patient’s adult appearance and give him the same “look” as he would have had if he had simply “matured.” The surgery should never attempt to restore the patient’s adolescent appearance. At a minimum, it can keep the patient from perceiving himself as being bald. In a patient who is distraught from extensive hair loss, this alone can be a significant accomplishment.
The young, rapidly balding patient poses perhaps the greatest challenge. Even an extensive procedure may not be able to compensate for the loss that can occur during the year it takes for the implants to fully grow. In this patient especially, understanding every aspect of the dynamic nature of the hair loss is critical. The progressive nature of balding, realistic hairline placement, the sparing of the crown, and the possible acceleration of loss from the surgery itself must be clearly explained. If the patient does not grasp each and every one of these ideas, it is better to postpone the surgery. Time is always on the physician’s side, since the progression of the patient’s hair loss will make each of these issues more tangible to the patient, simplifying the education process.
At the other end of the spectrum, the patient who has been bald for many years is much easier to satisfy since his expectations are generally reasonable, and modest amounts of hair will produce a marked change in his appearance. However, this same patient who has worn a hair piece for many years identifies with this look and is much more difficult to please. Like the very young patient, his reference point is a full head of hair. If this patient’s only goal is to be rid of the hair system, it is critical to determine the necessary amount of coverage that would be needed to accomplish this. If this has not been established beforehand, a transplant that might be perfect in every other respect, will be a total failure if the patient still feels compelled to wear his hair piece.
Different problems are presented by patients with more limited hair loss. The person who presents with recent progression from an adolescent hairline (Norwood Class I) to a mature hairline with natural recession at the temples (Class II), should not be transplanted. It should be explained that this evolution is normal and a flat hairline would look unnatural as he ages. In this patient, one should not attempt to “fill-in” the temples. It also may not be appropriate to transplant a young, early Class III patient. However, in an older Class III patient with stable hair loss, above average density, and without a familial history of significant balding, it would be appropriate to blunt the angles produced by the bitemporal recession, but not to eliminate it.
A final issue regarding expectations is related to the time frame in which the patient expects to see the results of his procedure. The normal follicular growth cycle is quite variable. In most patients, the majority of the transplanted hair begins to grow at about 3 to 4 months after surgery, with additional hair appearing over the next several months. In a small percentage of patients, the onset of growth of the bulk of the hair can be seen from 4 to 8 months or more, with additional new hair occasionally appearing up to 18 months after the transplant. Since newly transplanted hair will increase in diameter and in length, in this subset of patients, there may be continued cosmetic improvement for up to two years.
There has been much speculation regarding this so called “delayed growth,” and it appears that a number of factors may be contributory. Although still speculative, some of these include: 1) the normal asynchronous nature of human follicular growth cycles, 2) the possible resetting of the growth cycle after the post surgical effluvium (shedding) to a new full cycle, 3) the staggering of hair re-growth after the post surgical shedding, 4) retarded growth as a result of graft trauma such as temperature change, desiccation and crush injury, 5) amputation of the dermal papillae during graft dissection with a time lag for it to regenerate from the bulb, and 6) local factors causing delayed growth, such as the often asymmetric elastotic changes in the skin caused by the sun reaching the unevenly protected balding scalp.
Carefully controlled studies, some of which are already in progress, will be needed to sort out the relative importance of each of these factors. Regardless of the cause, it seems that great individual variability is an integral part of the transplantation process. This must be clearly explained in advance in order to keep our patients from becoming “impatient” after hair transplant surgery.
The Critical Session
Regardless of how many procedures are planned, we feel that one should always regard the first transplant as the critical procedure. The patient views the first session as a statement of future sessions. The first session builds confidence, so it is essential that expectations are met. The first session is the most important, for it is the one that generally establishes the hairline and frames the face. The initial transplant also places hair in a position to camouflage subsequent procedures.
In our experience, for the majority of patients, establishing the frontal hairline is the single most important function of the first procedure. At the outset, the frontal hairline should be placed in its normal, mature position. The hairline in this location should frame the face and restore a balance to the patient’s facial proportions in a way that is appropriate for a mature individual. In our opinion, the common practice of creating a hairline significantly above the mature hairline position with the intention of lowering it in a subsequent procedure should be avoided. If the intent is to conserve hair in anticipation of a very limited donor supply, one could still maximize the cosmetic impact of the surgery by creating more bitemporal recession or not extending the transplant as far back toward the crown. However, the position of the mid-portion of the frontal hairline should not be compromised, as this defines the “look” of the individual. Creating a hairline too high (in the hope of conserving donor hair) only accentuates the patient’s baldness by enlarging the forehead and distorting the normal facial proportions.
The other major goal of the first session should be to provide coverage to the remaining bald scalp with the exception of the crown. Since the Norwood Class A patients, by definition, do not have hair loss extending into the crown, if possible, their entire bald area should be treated in the first session. The amount of hair needed to cover the front and top of the patient’s scalp will obviously vary depending upon the extent of baldness, but there should always be an attempt to cover these areas in the first session, even if the coverage is light. In general, areas of the scalp which already have adequate coverage should not be transplanted. Although the edges of the transplanted area should be blended into the hair bearing skin, too aggressive encroachment may accelerate hair loss and not offer any additional cosmetic benefit. The goal should not be to restore adolescent density, since this is neither necessary from a cosmetic standpoint nor (as we have discussed) mathematically reasonable. Patients desiring adolescent density should be treated the same as those desiring an adolescent hairline. They should be further educated rather than ushered off to surgery.
In general, crown coverage should not be a goal of the first session, but should be addressed after the cosmetically more important front and top have been adequately transplanted. Since the front and top of the scalp are together a single cosmetic unit, the transplant may stop after this area has been treated. The patient can then evaluate for himself the adequacy of coverage from the first procedure, and if he desires more fullness or greater density, a second session can be used to supplement the area transplanted in the first. If crown coverage is attempted in the first session, the patient’s options will be much more limited, and the ability to produce an aesthetically balanced transplant might be permanently eliminated. An exception would be patients of Norwood Class III Vertex and Class IV, who are generally over the age of 30, have less risk of becoming extensively bald, and have good donor density and scalp laxity. In these situations, transplanting the crown in the first session can provide modest coverage to the area and will serve to camouflage a limited amount of further crown balding. What should be avoided in these patients is the risky practice of repeatedly transplanting hair into the crown to achieve a high degree of density, as this density can often not be supported as the balding progresses.
Beside the aesthetic issues which make the first session so important, there are many surgical advantages of working on a virgin scalp. In sum, implants can be placed more easily, more securely, and closer together into a normal scalp, since the blood supply and elasticity of the connective tissue are intact. In the donor area, maximum density and scalp mobility as well as the absence of scarring will facilitate a hairline closure. To take advantage of these factors, one should attempt to achieve, in the first session, as many of the patient’s goals as possible. In our opinion, what can safely be accomplished in one procedure is best done in one procedure, and should not be spread out over two or more.
When Should a Single Session Transplant be Considered?
A great deal can be accomplished in the first session. However, one must be realistic in anticipating what goals may be achieved with a single surgical procedure and in which patients these goals are possible.
As stated, we feel the main goals for the first session should be: 1) to provide a frame for the face, 2) to provide coverage to the front, and, when appropriate, the top and vertex of the scalp, 3) to have a totally natural appearance.
In general, for the physician to suggest to a patient that he might be satisfied with a single session, he should have relatively stable hair loss. This is especially important in the Norwood Class III, IIIa, IV, and V patients whose own hair contributes to the cosmetic appearance of the front of the scalp. In patients who have little frontal hair, the first procedure may successfully frame the face and provide coverage to the anterior portion of the scalp so that even with further balding, a second procedure would not be immediately necessary. For Norwood Class VI or VII patients in which the front and top of the scalp are adequately transplanted in the first procedure, satisfaction can be achieved in one session, because further expansion of the bald crown is relatively inconsequential. However, if coverage of the crown was attempted, then as the bald crown expands, the centrally transplanted grafts would become an isolated island of hair, and further surgery would be required.
A patient with lighter hair color will also have a greater chance of achieving his goals in one session as these colors reflect light and give the appearance of more hair. In addition, the low contrast with the underlying skin gives the illusion of more hair since the skin serves as a “filler” for the space between the hair shafts. In contrast, dark hair over light skin accentuates any spaces between the strands of hair. Salt and pepper hair works both by reflecting light and by creating another visual detail to detract from areas of sparseness. Certainly any patient who does not possess the genetic attributes of good hair color can easily change the color to complement the surgical procedure.
Wavy hair will generally provide better coverage than straight hair and is beneficial in the transplant. As with hair color, this can be manipulated after the surgery to improve the cosmetic impact of the transplant. Very curly hair, on the other hand can, on occasion, work to the patient’s disadvantage if complete coverage of the bald area is not anticipated. Very curly hair may increase the fullness of the transplanted area to such a degree that contrast with any remaining bald area may be accentuated. In addition, very curly hair transplanted to the front and top of the scalp may not be easily combed back to cover a bald crown.
The follicular density in the donor area will also impact the procedure. In patients with high density, there will be more hairs per follicular unit, and thus each implant will contain more hair. In patients with very high density, a significant proportion of implants containing 3 and 4 hairs each can be harvested from the donor area, giving a wonderfully full appearance, even from a single procedure.
Patients with hair of average or above-average diameter will have the best chance of success with one procedure. The cylinder of skin surrounding the follicular unit of a patient with coarse hair is roughly similar to a unit of fine hair; however, the volume of hair is vastly different. The diameter or “weight” of the patient’s hair is a huge variable. Whereas density may vary by a factor of 3 fold, hair weight may vary from patient to patient by many times that. Although it is much easier to quantify the density (number of hairs/mm2), rather than the weight of an individual hair, the latter is probably more significant to the outcome of the procedure. Those patients with early balding who have fine, dark hair of high density are very difficult to satisfy in a single session, since the transplanted hair is often viewed against the background of the patient’s thick terminal hair population that surrounds the bald area. By contrast, in a similar patient with coarser hair, satisfaction is more easily achieved in a single session.
Contrary to what one might expect, the extensively bald patient, even with low donor density, can often be very satisfied after one procedure. These patients often have very reasonable expectations and after being bald for many years are ecstatic to have hair framing their face, light coverage on top, and “something to comb.” In order for expectations to be met in one session, the realities of the supply/demand situation must be taken into account. It is obvious that for individuals in the Norwood Class VI or VII pattern, only light to modest coverage can be achieved in a single session, since the area in need of hair will exceed the total donor supply by a factor of at least 6:1, even under ideal circumstances.
Finally, grooming patterns will also influence the success of a single procedure. Patients who plan to comb their hair to the side rather than straight back will have the appearance of much more fullness. Unfortunately, this hair style will not provide crown coverage. Many patients achieve the “best of both worlds” by combing their hair diagonally backwards.
References:
1. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR, Szaniawski W, Halperin AJ. Follicular transplantation. Int J Aesthet Rest Surg 1995; 3:119-132.
2. Norwood OT. Male pattern baldness: classification and incidence. So. Med. J 1975;68:1359-1365.
3. Rassman WR, Carson S. Micrografting in extensive quantities; the ideal hair restoration procedure. Dermatol Surg 1995; 21:306-311.
4. Headington JT: Transverse microscopic anatomy of the human scalp. Arch Dermatol 1984;120:449-456.
5. Kim JC, Choi, YC. Regrowth of grafted human scalp hair after removal of the bulb. Dermatol Surg 1995; 21:312-313.
6. Limmer BL. Relating hair growth theory and experimental evidence to practical hair transplantation. Am J Cosmetic Surg 1994;11:305-310.
7. Seager D. Binocular stereoscopic dissecting microscopes: should we use them? Hair Transplant Forum Int 1996;Vol 6 No 5:2-5.
8. Limmer BL. Elliptical donor stereoscopically assisted micrografting as an approach to further refinement in hair transplantation. Dermatol Surg 1994;20:789-793.
9. Kuster W, Happle R. The inheritance of common baldness: two B or not two B? J Am Acad Dermatol 1984;11:921-926.
10. Rassman WR, Pomerantz, MA. The art and science of minigrafting. Int J Aesthet Rest Surg 1993;1:27-36.
11. Demis DJ. “Clinical Dermatology.” Philadelphia, PA: J.B. Lippincott Co. 1994, (1) 2-35 p3.
12. Bernstein RM. Are scalp reductions still indicated? Hair Transplant Forum Int 1966; Vol 6(3):12-13.
13. Bernstein RM, Rassman WR. What is delayed growth? Hair Transplant Forum Int 1997; 7 no.2.
14. Cooley J, Vogel J. Loss of the dermal papilla during graft dissection and placement: another cause of x-factor? Hair Transplant Forum Int 1997; 7:20-21.
Dr. Bernstein is Clinical Professor of Dermatology at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University in New York. He is recognized worldwide for pioneering Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation. Dr. Bernstein’s hair restoration center in Manhattan is devoted to the treatment of hair loss using his state-of-the-art hair transplant techniques. To read more publications on hair loss, visit http://www.bernsteinmedical.com/.