What Is Hair Replacement Surgery? | What Makes a Good Candidate? | How Is the Surgery Done? | What Can You Expect? | A Careful Decision

If you are losing your hair, there are surgical options to restore the hair that heredity has taken away. According to Dr. Paul Riggs of Clearwater, Florida, "The practice of treating hair loss is actually the 'art' of treating hair loss." Riggs goes on to explain that whatever method for restoring lost hair is chosen, the procedures used should be tailored to the patient, with the results as natural as possible under the circumstances.

How Is the Surgery Done?

Doctors can achieve natural results by transplanting very small grafts (micrografts) of hair into the bald area in groups of one, two, and three hair follicles. The grafts are placed close together, and the result is denser hair growth that is more natural looking.

The procedures for obtaining these small grafts vary. Richard S. Greene, MD, of Plantation, Florida has done more than 7,000 hair transplants. He prefers to "harvest" donor hair using a multi-blade scalpel. Other doctors, such as Riggs, use a single blade. Neither doctor uses a laser for harvesting hair. Instead, lasers are used to implant the grafts.

Aside from grafting, there are other procedures used in hair restoration. For example, scalp reduction is a surgical method that can effectively reduce a man's bald appearance. According to the International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS), it is often done prior to hair replacement surgery. In this procedure, patients with a good amount of dense hair on the sides and back of their scalp have their scalp stretched upward to cover as much of their bald area as possible, leaving less area in which grafts of hair follicles need be inserted. However, the ISHRS cautions that there can be complications with this procedure, including scarring, stretching back of the bald area, and the creation of an unnatural appearance called a slot deformity.

Scalp flap is another procedure, which involves moving entire segments of hair bearing scalp into a bald area. Patients with frontal baldness are ideal candidates since this procedure provides instantaneous hairline reconstruction. A different type of scalp flap, called a scalp lift, is used for treating hair loss in the crown of the scalp. This procedure involves moving the fringe hair on the sides and the back upward towards the center of the bald area in a U-shaped pattern. It is used in combination with hair transplantation and can achieve good results.