Body Hair Transplants: Using Beard Hair to Increase Available Donor Supply
The following case from our hair loss social community and discussion forums, was presented by a staff physician from Coalition hair transplant clinic Shapiro Medical:
Follicular unit extraction (FUE) has become more prevalent over the past few years. There are many good reasons for this including an increase in the number of high quality results. Although, many clinics claim to do very large “mega” session FUE cases, at Shapiro Medical we have stayed cautious and conservative with our large FUE cases. As we all know, the “SAFE” donor zone is a defined area and venturing out of that area will indeed give more grafts, albeit grafts that may not last a lifetime. At our clinic, an average “large” FUE case is 2400-2700 grafts. This type of FUE will also typically take 2 days as we do not like to put additional stress on the patient as well as the grafts by doing it all in one day.
I wanted to briefly present a recent case of ours done at SMG where we increased our overall number of grafts by adding beard donor hair. Typically beard hair has been used as a donor when all of the other areas of donor are depleted. This has been for good reason as beard hair is typically only one or two haired grafts. Also, the characteristics of beard are not the same as scalp. Finally, although beard grafts grow well when transplanted, they don’t typically have a lower yield (growth rate) than scalp.
This patient was a 28 y.o. male with a 5+ year history of hair loss. He has not yet started preventative medical hair loss treatments. He was a 4 on the Norwood Scale with a donor density of 68 FU/cm2. This patient wanted as much covered in one session as possible. With his lower density and the patient choosing FUE over follicular unit strip surgery (strip can often get more grafts on the first pass) we looked for additional areas of donor in this patient. Beard was the likely choice. Risk of scarring or hypopigmentation, although still a risk, is not common in the beard. Also, the beard that was used was under the chin, so it is less visible.
Because of the increased number of grafts, the patient came into the office for a total of 3 days. The first day was relatively short as only the incisions were made in the scalp. Day 2 and 3 consisted of FUE extraction of the scalp and beard. All the grafts that were extracted each day were transplanted on the same day. We ended up extracting 2600 from the scalp and 499 from the beard for a total of 3099 grafts.
These are the pre and post-op photos.
-Shapiro Medical
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David
Editorial Assistant and Forum Co-Moderator for the Hair Transplant Network, the Coalition Hair Loss Learning Center, and the Hair Loss Q & A Blog.
Technorati Tags: Follicular unit extraction, FUE, hair loss, hair loss treatments, Norwood Scale, follicular unit strip surgery