Hair Restoration

Posted on June 1st, 2009 by Peter in

The problem of thinning hair is a major concerns of people all over the world. Watching the myriad of hair restoration commercials flooding the television gives one some idea of the problem of thinning hair. Today, people are examining hair restorations results from a replacement transplant to non-medical treatments, but it is the hair restoration through a replacement transplant which seem to become the popular procedure. There are things to consider, though, before one commits to either procedure.

Having lunch at a Five Star Singapore restaurant with a close friend of mine, who has had restorative hair replacement, why he choose that procedure over the others. He told me that there were many things to consider about both. One being his expectations. Some people are not candidates for surgical restoration because they lack a sufficient amount of donor hair . The donor hair is what’s inserted in the thinning areas during the transplant. In some cases, patients opt for a partial replacement paired with hair additions. Then he had to consider the surgery. A hair replacement transplant can go wrong and get very ugly. Many patients are unhappy with the results will have no available options but to do a hair addition . Then he said, there’s the expense to consider. A full hair replacement transplant are quiet high. But for him the expensive was worth it.

For other type of non-surgical procedures, he said, were the shampoos, creams, vitamin supplements, prescriptions pills and other products claiming to prevent hair loss and in some cases stimulate hair growth. However, only a few of these products have undergone FDA trials or other valid clinical studies to prove that they provide the results that their marketing claims suggest. But, he said, as I could see, he choose the more expensive surgical hair restoration and he was very happy with the results. I would recommend it over the non-surgical procedures.

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