Hair transplantation is more important than anything else because the final result is finally confirmed after a year.


It is a space where members are diagnosed with their condition after surgery and counseled on postoperative management, case-by-case occurrence, and additional supplementation methods.


It has the most clinical data in the world, where doctors related to hair transplantation also visit to study cases.

Thank you to all the seniors who left a meaningful record that can't express its value to someone preparing for surgery.


Leaving photo data after surgery is also "patient strength" and is a strong insurance policy against future unexpected surgical outcomes.

[re] Thank you for your nice writing.^^ (Cold radish)

  • 22years ago

  • 3,119
0
  • Surgery Method -
  • Implanted Amount -grafts
  • Surgery Progress -
  • Age Range 비공개

>Feeling the pain of sympathy in Daemo, I honestly write down some of my thoughts to my comrades from my hair loss to transplant surgery until now > to repay the comrades who are agonizing together.
>I think it was when I was in high school that I didn't have much hair for the first time. Ten years ago, I think I heard from someone who has strong self-esteem and doesn't want to lose, that my friend's girlfriend said, "You're going to be bald later." >After graduating from high school and entering college, my hair decreased rapidly, and I had to accept my father's cool hairstyle as fate. > attend college I joined the army as a soldier in the middle, but it was really hard to tease the seniors who made fun of my nickname "Imaban" in the army. At that time, I went on vacation at a pharmacy near the unit and asked, "Give me a medicine that gives me a headache," and I gave him a pill, "I thought I had a medicine that gives me a headache until then, but now that I think about it, I was very naive."I'm still curious what kind of medicine the white pill I bought and secretly took at that time was. >Not long before I was discharged from the military, I learned that there was no bald drug, and at that time, I seriously thought about the wig that was planted in the newspaper.
>So I returned to school after being discharged from the military, and I was worried a lot because I was originally a major with a lot of girls Originally, he had an active interpersonal relationship as a general manager of a difficult department due to his bright personality and fondness for leadership. I think girls three or four years younger than me passed away with a bitter smile when they saw kids teasing me as bald. So my hair condition got worse and worse, my confidence as much as my hair was escaping, and I became more timid and took away my reason, confidence, laughter, opportunity, everything along with hair loss from my feisty mid-20s.
>Then, I got to know Professor Kim Jeong-cheol at Mescom, and I also got to know about hair transplantation.Hospital, Fka, getting multiple information from the damo in early 1999.I learned a lot of things, etc. - I was able to share the pain of sympathy, and I am very grateful. That's when I thought I'd have my first hair done After a year or so of splitting my fka, my hair condition improved beyond recognition.But it still didn't work on the front part, and it worked a lot on the top of the head So, I visited Kyungpook National University Hospital in early 2000, and Professor Kim Jeong-cheol, whose face was black, and Hwang Sung-joo, who was wearing glasses in a round earl at that time, came out for a while during the transplant surgery, looked at my hair condition and asked to see after a while, and I was able to see the effectiveness of Pka.At that time, I felt very good when I left the hospital. Feeling liberated from the death sentence...? > To get surgery yourself, you have to wait two years, and you have to wait about a month if you get it from your daughterWith the horse, I left the hospital door > As I left the hospital door, a person of my age similar to my age approached. I asked if I came to the hospital for my head. However, we talked for a few minutes, saying that he was on his way to see Professor Kim because of his hair.
>He looked fine. He told me about the side effects of artificial hair, saying that the side effects were severe, that he should not do it at any time, and that he also had to re-operate. Is he coming into Daemo, too? I'm curious.
>I decided that the only alternative to continuous baldness was transplantation in the end, and I decided that I should have a big decision transplant in my end life, collect information from various hospitals, and since I live in Gyeongbuk, it was the best thing, and I had the biggest belief.But I had to wait too long.So I also consulted with Ulsan Hwang Jung-wook again. I didn't set a date for the surgery, I hesitated.He was very kind and gave me Dr. Kim's "Hair transplant story" book, so I read it once.Meanwhile, Kyungpook National University Hospital contacted me that a surgery date had been set.
>> >> *Surgical story >> Surgery is the second time if you have a transplant after circumcision in high school 1.
>Surgical surgery of cutting the head in half with a knife, removing and dividing the flesh, and sticking it in a needle and planting it hundreds of thousands of times was ruined.In addition, anxiety about surgery and procedures that are also expensive.Surgery, which only one person can do well, >Everything has made an important choice, dreaming of my life to find again. Because no one's giving my head back anymore.......> I lay on the operating table.Arrives around 10 a.m., pays 5.6 million won for surgery on the first floor of the hospital, and blood tests while going up and down the building.I received it, and the transplant team nurse asked me to bring the test result, so I solved lunch simply at the restaurant around the hospital, and went in at around 1 p.m. >Exactly, it started at around 1:30 p.m. and the surgery ended at 5 p.m.
>I anesthetized the back of my hair, and when I was anesthetized, the feeling of anesthesia coming into my scalp hurt a lot. In order to stabilize me in the middle of the day, Professor Kim Jung-chul keeps talking, and where is your hometown?While talking about what are you doing? and so on, I knew that Professor Kim Jung-chul and his hometown were the same, and I felt a little settled down.
>He took off the back of his hair with the feeling that something was falling off. At the same time, I don't know who the other teacher is.The suture surgery on the back of the head was relaxed with an assistant nurse.
>I'm lying down with my hair sewn up, bandaged, and I feel like I'm lying down with the beating sound on my thumb. I think I'm..What should I say...Those who have operated on it will know.
>Anaesthesia began again on the site to be transplanted, and transplant surgery began. Two medical students watched the surgical scene all the time, and the practical class with the professor seemed to be parallel.Although I felt like Kyobojae.Next to him, a nurse appeared to insert a hair knife into the transplant machine. I think the click was the counting sound.Professor Kim transplanted for more than an hour, talking about his hometown, my school major, and so on.And I felt that the other teacher was a little slow to continue the surgery, and Professor Kim Jung-chul finished the rest. The anesthesia was relieved once in the middle, and the operation continued under anesthesia.
>I couldn't feel the pain, and the needle came in The degree of loss, of course, the anesthesia was painful, but >That's how the surgery ended, and the number of transplants was planted a lot of 2,300. The professor was kind, and >The nurses seem to have been sincere. Thank you again.Blood was driven to my head for hours, making me dizzy for a moment.
>And I looked in the mirror. Between the bloodstained hair, I could see the deep short hair. When I was about to laugh or cry, what had been on my chest for years felt like it was falling down. I came out and said hello, the medicine had been prescribed for lunch, and I took a note of caution from the nurse, put on my hat, and drove home.
>*Postoperative care >>When I came home and looked in the mirror, I felt refreshed and sad. ................
>There was a limit to covering the area of the head larger than the palm of the hand with 2300 numbers.
>It's been a little over four months since I had surgery at the end of March.
>It's too early to say anything now, but I'm generally satisfied.
>The front line is revived, and the bangs are powerful, so it feels like my hairstyle is back to its old self.
>I had a lot of hair. I won't do this or that. Sooner or later, I will post a picture before and after the transplant.
>After the surgery, I took a good rest at home. I was a graduate student and I could adjust the time.
>I don't drink well, I smoke a lot, but I don't smoke for about 1 pack and 2 days a day, and I just smoked from the 3rd day.
>I think it's my first time drinking alcohol for three weeks.
>After about a month, a lot of transplant hair fell out. In my case, many seem to have just survived.
>After being a little insensitive for 2-3 months, I could feel that the transplant hair started to grow again.
>Something like mesenchymal folliculitis was rare, and when squeezed by hand, the graft hair was also lost along with the porem.
>I was very worried, but most of them seemed to come back.
>And, I part my hair from right to left, but now I part my hair from left to right. If you are undergoing transplant surgery later, please make sure to mention this. Looking at the picture, it seems that Professor Kim is also parting his hair from left to right.
>The thread on the back of the hair was untied in a week, disinfected 2.3 times a day, and 10 days later, I cut my hair short by sports at the barber shop. The scar looks more than 10cm diagonally clear, but now I can see it if I lift my head up and look closely, and if I shave my head, I can see it, but it's not a big problem.
>* My thoughts >> It's really unfortunate that you don't have hairstyles and hair that make up 80% of your appearance.
>Isn't he missing the opportunity in life that he came without realizing because of his loss of confidence, antipathy, and helpless life?
>I think hair loss in your 20s, the golden age of life, is no different from being sentenced to death.
>There is no clear treatment, and some drugs are only for prevention, and the most fundamental alternative is surgery, but it is also difficult for the economic power of the 20s. What should I do?I think there will be a lot of people who sympathize. I think it's too harsh to live in isolation from the world after feeling sick little by little.
>I think it is most desirable to expand the scope of transplantation that can be treated fundamentally.It may be against equity, but I hope that the scope will be widened so that only bald patients in their 20s can undergo surgery.
>Emphasizing that hair loss in the golden age of life is much larger than ordinary people think, >I want to reveal.
>I had a transplant at the age of 30, but I wanted to tell you that the past 10 years have been difficult.
>It seems that the writing has been lengthened in a hurry, I hope it will be a little helpful to the hair loss, a good world without hair loss, and a world where everyone is not discriminated against because of their appearance...............
> [This post was copied from 2006-06-2204:32:55 hair transplant by the CEO]
We cannot rule out the possibility that all surgical cases will be provided with support or convenience from the hospital and written in favor of a specific hospital. All plastic surgery has the potential for unexpected side effects. Please use it only as a reference. The legal rights and responsibilities of this post lie with the publisher himself.

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