- Surgery Method Incision
- Implanted Amount 2700grafts (1350Hair follicle)
- Surgery Progress 50days
- Age Range early 40s
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.
[Mowoolim Clinic]

[Apgujeong Mo Woo-rim Clinic] Review of sideburn incision surgery (7th week)
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8months ago
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1,860
\n I've been paying a lot of attention to my hair style since I became an adult, but unfortunately, I've always been unhappy that I don't have sideburns (hereinafter referred to as Guretnaru). My hair is not bad, there is no hair loss, and I have significantly fewer gray hair than my peers at this point, but without Gurenaru puts a big limit on my hair style.
\nThat's why I style it by taking out the side hair for a long time and leaving a so-called guranaru to cover the guranaru part. If you set it up well, there's no problem on the outside, but if you go to the water, it's a big hit lol. When it's wet, it doesn't maintain its shape and splits, so it's ugly.
\nBut in my life, I became a world where I could plant Gurenaru, and I kept it timidly as a bucket list of my life, and even though I'm not a little old now, I started talking to my wife one day. Then, my wife also said she wanted to get counseling because of the hairline correction. It's good that I went to a hospital where the director is often on the show and got counseling, and then I learned about the flow and got a second consultation.
\nBefore visiting, I went to the Mo Woo-rim blog and found that there were a lot of posts written by the head of the representative of the victims. What I felt while reading the article was that Director Lee had a clear design philosophy and that he seemed to be a meticulous perfectionist in a slightly metamorphic (praise). LOL I'm quite sensitive when it comes to what I care about (such as hair). So I really liked the smell of the director's writing. I definitely thought that if I consulted with this person, there would be a high probability of deciding this place.
\nIt's been a long time.
Eventually, I made a reservation right after the consultation.
\n \n \n1. Design Decision \n \n \n I said that there is no so-called hereditary hair loss. Therefore, my surgery is a cosmetic surgery that proceeds from a pure aesthetic point of view. Design would be that important, but the director talked to me right before the surgery and set the final design.
\nThe length of the gouretnaru was supposed to come down to the vicinity of the ear bead, and it was supposed to go down with some thickness rather than too much triangular, and the ends were supposed to have a little messy finish for naturalness. Rather than breaking the boundary in a line like a line, a few strands are also located lower.
\nIn fact, as long as there is a gouretnaru, the fine trimming of the shape is something that the hairdresser can control with a barricade.
\n Also, the side hair line was eventually the sum of the temples and the gouretnaru, so they made the temple part angled to fit the gouretnaru. I'm going to fill in the M-shaped part that's slightly in. I'm naturally lacking in this temple, so I need quite a few parameters on this side.
\n \n \n2. Surgery (D+0) \n \n \n We arrived at the hospital early in the morning and were directed to the recovery room and waited. The interior of the lobby of Mo-rim is so cafe-like, but the recovery room is also neat, so the guardian can comfortably wait while the patient is operating. My wife decided to come while I was undergoing surgery.
\nFor those who don't like being sick like me, I think it's better for their guardians to wait together in the hospital. Of course, there will be little chance of a mishap, but I also need help when I return home and I can even groan after I wake up. Of course, those who are not sleeping will not be affected.
\n Surgery is performed first by incision and suture of the occipital region in the operating room, then by coming back to the recovery room, separating the hair follicles while resting, and then by going back to the operating room to transplant. If the separation ends quickly, the movement to the recovery room in the middle can be omitted.
\n The surgery was done in a short period of time, as I feel. I definitely told the director that I'd like to take care of each of them before the incision and before the transplant, but all other memories have been deleted Lol I just woke up and I was lying in the recovery room after everything was done. Of course, I don't remember any pain in the middle of the surgery Hehe \n \n I guess I'm quite vulnerable to propofol. When I was in the recovery room for a while after my laryngeal incision, I texted my wife, and she said, "It's a shame Lol I thought this is what people do when they drink and get film cut off. Even when I got home, I threw up right away. Are people who are weak in alcohol also weak in propofol? Some people are right to look for it on purpose.
\n I told my children at home that I had received dad's treatment, but I wasn't very interested in it because it wasn't a very bizarre look. lol Since I came back, I was told to spray the birth spray every 30 minutes, so I set a 30-minute timer on my phone, but this 30 minutes came every 10 minutes. I tried to keep it moist, so I sprayed it hard.
\n \n \n3. The day after the surgery (D+1) \n \n \n I just slept with my face and head all chapped. With gauze on the back of your head. Maybe because I was a little scared, I took Tylenol in advance and slept, but the pain was not severe except for the feeling of pulling the incision a little.
\n Instead, I slept straight on the sofa with my upper body high, but I woke up from time to time because it bothered me for some reason. I don't think there's blood on the gauze.
\nAfter waking up, he headed to the hospital looking shabby. The staff took off the gauze and washed my hair. That's good enough Haha, and from now on, I learned how to minimize irritation until I remove the thread. Using the hypoallergenic shampoo received with the spray the day before, the transplant is only coated with foam and washed down the foam with running water.
\nIn the meantime, the bloodstains were blurred, and I didn't know at this time, but my face was a little swollen.
\n \n \n4. Surgery D+3 to +2 weeks \n \n \n 3 days after surgery is the first day of work after the long-awaited surgery.
I didn't bother to explain it in the beginning, but it was a big part of the reason I had a "cut-off" surgery because a non-cut-off is shaved. Of course, there were methods that were possible with minimal shaving without shaving, such as micro-cut, but I felt that if you were going to have a non-cut, you would have to shave your head extensively and collect it randomly from a large area in terms of surgical quality and density of the back of your head in the future. Of course, good doctors will give you the best results in the meantime.
\nIf you operate by incision, there is no sign of people with original hair like me. And the M-shape or temples are covered with bangs. But the unexpected part was the Gurenaru part.
\n Originally, I grew out the front of my side hair and made a guranaru, right? But some of it flies right before the surgery. This is because you shave the boundary line slightly and go into surgery to ensure the boundary between the existing head and the implantable part.
\nSo the hair in the front of the guranaru disappears a little, and it's the design I wanted, but the transplanted part is not thin. And crucially, I can't brush that part during this period. Usually, I would brush my skin with a comb, clean the side of my hair, dry it, and put it on if I had something to apply, right? But now, if I sweep my skin to brush my hair, the fate of the vulnerable guys that I just planted in that area..
\n For this reason, contrary to what was planned, Gurenaru's disguise became difficult. Rather than covering it in the middle, I would rather put all my hair on the side behind my ears like a new bride and went to work openly. People don't care about me as much as I careHowever, from the first day, a client employee asked me if I had changed my hairstyle, and there were some moments when I was surprised. \n \n If you have a plan to plant a gouretnaru and you want to cover it completely, please grow your hair on the sides more voluminously and widely before going into surgery. Over time, bruises form around Gurenaru. In my case, the swelling after surgery is not severe, but it started to disappear around the 5th day, and bruises were visible from the 4th to the 10th day.
\nThe night before, after shampooing to minimize irritation, I saw a lot of white dead skin cells sitting on the gouretnaru area, which bothered me a bit, but I think it wasn't as visible as I thought because I spray it every two hours at work.
\nIt's not severe over the course of time, but there was a throbbing pain between the top of the head and the incision, or there was an intermittent throbbing sensation, but it's not limited to the incision, but it's the whole head pain. Of course, it was itchy.
\n \n \n5. Surgery D+2 Week \n \n \n It's finally the second week of surgery.
The long-awaited day of drawing thread. \n \n \n Since my job is not far from the hospital, I used my lunch time to go to the hospital. The thread was picked by another director and Lee came out to look at it. The incision is said to be in good condition, with transplant hair planted to a certain extent.
\n is finally able to do fingerprint shampoo from that evening, and I think I've been dying for two weeks Lol I just wanted to wash my hair coolly because the amount of dead skin cells seems to be increasing day by day. Of course, I couldn't rub the precious transplants, so I didn't wash them very hard, but it was a shampoo that felt a sense of freedom.
\n I'm sure everyone who's had surgery will agree. \n \n \n \n 6. Surgery D+4 weeks (one month) \n \n \n It's finally been a month.
From the patient's point of view a month ago, I'm visiting the hospital as a guardian today It's the day my wife gets surgery. The two of us got counseling together and made a reservation together, and there was a time interval, but the time has already come to that.
\n It is said that the dark period can usually start in the second week of surgery, but I feel a little dense from the left of the M-shaped part, but I don't think the right part or both of the gouretnaru parts came out much.
\nIt's been almost a month, so I went to the hair salon once. I'm worried about the dark age, but I also blew away a lot of the Guranaru part. It was a little awkward to cover the fake side hair of the guretnaru on top of the planted one. I also slightly raised the back of my hair as an appeal this time, but the hairdresser cared about it, so I cut the scar so that it wouldn't be too short.
\n I don't know how it will be if you look at the picture, but I don't think it's very awkward even if it's not long. I can't see any scars from the back. Those who cut their hair after surgery don't have to worry too much. Unless it's too high an appeal.
\n \n \n7. Surgery D+7 Week \n \n \n Today is the 7th week and the 50th day of surgery.
I think the time has been very long and short so far.
\n Darkness is a time for some people to fall out by now, but \n It hasn't come cool yet. The M-shaped fill is definitely much smaller (30% left on the left and 60% left on the right) but Guretnaru is not yet. (70-80% left) Of course, I'm going to lose a few strands every day, so it's less than the first time, but I haven't experienced that kind of phenomenon in a short period of time.
\nPersonally, I think it would be better for mental health to just come quickly and end quickly, but in my case, is it now? No? That's what I think everyday LOL We'll have to wait and see if it's steadily decreasing or moving on until it's 3 months old.
\nThere is no end to human greed, I was already satisfied at the time of the operation, but furthermore, after a year, all the transplant sites are dense, and Guretnaru is hoping that they will not float much and grow well at the lower angle When I looked at the reviews, there were people who were worried about the angle at which the gouretnaru was planted.
\nI'd like to tell you to get counseling first for those who are hesitant about surgery. It is true that the cost is expensive, but resolving the shortcomings itself seems to bring a significant upgrade to the quality of life.
\nThank you for reading.
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