- Surgery Method -
- Implanted Amount -grafts
- Surgery Progress -
- Age Range Nondisclosure
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] Overcoming hair loss of a man in his 40s (9) - 1 year later
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20years ago
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2,140
Thank you for the picture and writing.
My hair loss started 15 years ago, so it's severe. I'm 40 and a half years old now.
So I'm thinking about getting a hair transplant, can you tell me by email which hospital it is?
ispy12001@yahoo.co.kr
>A year has passed, and I've changed my appearance. I don't see any fine hair in the picture, but the situation is actually better.
>I cut my hair short a few times because it was messy because my transplant hair was curly. If I didn't cut it and cut it, it would have been covered more.
>For your information, we don't use thickeners or fpe at all.
>(In the same hospital yesterday, 3,250 hairs were planted intensively on the right side and top of the head, which are very poor in density, and today
>I'm living well enough to forget about the surgery.)
>
>The solution to hair loss is hair transplantation.
>Then let me tell you about the questions of those who are considering surgery with my experience.
>
>1) Surgery period
>Hair loss early on should think carefully about surgery. Even if it's a concern, hang in there and do it later. You know why. You may wonder what the use of surgery is when you're young and you're old, but even when you're old, you're young at heart.
>When you are young, you will have surgery due to concerns about your appearance, but as you get older, your appearance is competitive, so you will have surgery.
>After I started losing my hair, I was stressed when I looked in the mirror because I thought it would continue to get worse in the future, not because of who I am, but because I thought it would get worse without hope. If you plan to have surgery later, I think you'll be less worried. Sometimes people in the early M-shape have surgery, so please think carefully about the future.
>It would be good to do it after the hair loss progresses, and keep it as a profile picture when you are young.
>It's a simple surgery, so you can do it whenever you want, regardless of the spring and summer.
>
>2) Surgery hospital
>If you search the Internet, you will find a reputable hospital. Choose a few places and get all the counseling and decide.
>But you can't go to any hospital and choose a hospital specializing in hair transplantation.
>The cost will be a problem, so save even if you don't wear it and don't eat it. I know it's gotten a lot cheaper these days. Money is second only to add to the biggest worries of life.
>
>3) Opinions on concerns before surgery
>Don't be scared that you'll be sick. Only the anesthetic injection hurts a little. However, it's about the pain of the needle entering. Rather, there is a greater mental fear of surgical knives and needles going back and forth. If you can think of that fear as joy, the physical pain is minimal.
>The hospital is aware of these patients' mental fears and is developing many ideas in its own way to reassure them.
>Even if anesthesia is released after surgery, the back of the head is pulled. It's enough to endure without painkillers. It doesn't hurt.
>Workers were worried that their faces would be swollen or the transplant area would be marked, but in my case, the doctor was sure that it wouldn't be swollen at all and I actually didn't swell at all. The swelling must depend a lot on the doctor. Even if the transplant site is severe like me, it's been three days, so no one recognizes it. However, once the surgery is completed, such concerns are also eliminated. If I know, I feel like I should know. Now that I've done something difficult, I wonder what the problem is. My life is mine. Don't worry about that and just do it first. The surgical scars on the back of the head are not displayed at all even if you cut your hair short. After a year, you have to look closely at your head to discover it. I was worried that my head might not grow after surgery, and I was a little older and worried that I might have a unique personality, but the doctor told me to lean on it. Everyone is flying. Just keep what the hospital tells you to do after surgery, and what you are told to be careful.
>The aftereffects of surgery, that is, the back of the head or the transplant, were not present at all, and I know that only some idiosyncratic people have minor problems, but it is not a level of concern.
>
>4) Quality of life after surgery
>Now I don't hate looking in the mirror or taking pictures.
>Instead of dark clothes, I wear cool and bright clothes. I don't mind meeting my old friends. I don't hate meeting new people, and I'm not afraid of rain and wind, exercise, or sweat. That doesn't mean you've become a normal person, but you've gotten a lot better than before.
>I don't care about my head anymore even though the density has decreased a lot. And I got more greedy, so I did the second round, and I dare to expect it to be closer to a normal person a year later.
>But don't expect too much. Hair transplant surgery complements the current complex to some extent, not a cure.
>I think hair transplant surgery is a really good decision in my life, and I really want to recommend transplantation to others.
>Let's all look forward to a new drug that will cure us someday.
>
>The man in his 40s also changed like this after the surgery. I live confidently with a slight change in my appearance.
>Young (I'm sorry for those who are older than me) I hope you will also have courage, be faithful to your current life, and see the opportunity.
>
[This post was copied from 2006-06-2204:32:55 hair transplant by the CEO]
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