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a)
"Micrografts" are obtained by slicing the donor tissue into very
small sections, each of which contains a single "hair follicle"
which in turn contains 1-3 hairs. 1-3 hair bundles, as seen with a
dissecting microscope or magnifying loopes are called Follicular Units.
These are placed into tiny holes made by an ordinary hypodermic needle in
front of any larger grafts that may also be used or to fill in any hairless
gaps between larger grafts. Micrografts are employed as part of every
session, regardless of the type of graft used in the rest of the recipient
area. They
enable patients to wear their hair in virtually any style, even combed
straight back. It should be pointed out that if an area is totally
transplanted, with pre-existing hair remaining, then the one way the hair
may not be able to be worn is parted straight through the middle.
b)
Donor tissue may be sliced into sections each containing approximately 2-4
or 5-6 hairs. These are placed into small 1-2 mm round holes or slits made
with a small scalpel blade in the recipient area. These round
"minigrafts" and "slit" grafts may be used in
combination with micrografts in a "½ to 1" wide zone in
front of larger grafts (as described below), to produce a natural looking
hairline with gradually increasing density, or alternately may be used (in
approximately 85% of our patients) for the entire recipient area. They are
also used in areas such as the crown which do not need the density of
larger grafts. Slit grafts and round minigrafts are important new resources
for those patients who only want (or need) lighter coverage, have or will
have very large bald areas, or have very little hair in the donor areas; a
limited supply of donor grafts can cover a greater surface area because
these smaller grafts produce a sprinkled type of hair growth that is far
more natural looking than the "pluggy" or "barbie-doll"
look that may be produced by larger grafts, until the area is densely
transplanted.
This
type of graft is especially useful for patients who have fine textured
and/or light coloured hair, and those who have (or will have) sparse temple
hair in whom densely transplanted frontal hair would look unnatural.
c)
"Standard" grafts, are grafts which contain 8-30 hairs. These are
the traditional grafts that up until about 10 years ago were the standard
grafts employed by all hair restoration surgeons. These grafts are placed
into round holes made in the recipient area, with a small punch. The holes
are placed approximately 1 graft apart, in a "checkerboard"
fashion, to leave a surrounding blood supply. "Standard" grafts
are the most efficient way to produce dense coverage; four sessions can
solidly fill any area. However they are always placed behind a ½ -
1" wide hairline zone composed of one or more of the smaller graft
types described earlier. In addition, because many patients do not have a
large enough donor area, or because they may (or may not) look "pluggy"
between transplanting sessions, "standard" grafts have come into disfavor are very
seldom used any more. Currently they are used in less than 1% of my patients, and only in long standing
patients who had sessions many years ago with the traditional grafts and
need to be updated.
In
general slit grafts and micrografts produce more natural looking results
than an equivalent amount of donor tissue transplanted as standard grafts.
However, because no bald skin is actually removed (hair is only added),
slit grafts and micrografts do not ultimately produce the same hair density
as standard grafts or round minigrafts - unless more donor tissue is used
than would be for round grafts.
This
is an important but seldom mentioned drawback of treating patients with
only micrografts or single "follicular units" On the other hand
"all micrograft" sessions are ideal for treating individuals who
are willing to do extra sessions for high density in return for possibly
less noticeability during treatment, or for those who are genuinely not interested
in high density. Lastly, slit grafts and micrografts are very advantageous
in treating areas that still have persisting hair - for example in patients
who have relatively early MPB or female thinning. Slits and needle holes
can be placed between existing hair and none is sacrificed as occurs during
the making of a round hole for minigrafts and standard grafts. EACH CASE
MUST BE CONSIDERED ON AN INDIVIDUAL BASIS. There are a number of
factors which influence the decision as to which type of grafts will be
used and where they will be placed; these include the texture and colour of
hair, hair density, the size of the donor area, the size of the site to be
transplanted, and patient goals. In many individuals, a combination of two
or more of the graft types will be used, and in others only micrografts
will be utilized. You will be shown photos of what you can expect from
each. No one type of graft will provide "the best of all
worlds" for all patients.
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