Hair today Gone Tommorrow

Balding is not something anyone would look forward to. Even though we are unable to stop aging we can help ourselves when it comes to hair loss.

Our hair does get thinner as we age and more for some than others but with today's medications and creams etc we may be able to slow this down.

I have looked into many hair loss remedies and have found some that are better than others in how they say the can slow down hair loss and some even say they will help your existing hair grow more and stronger. I do not know about that but have heard of some of the good some of them do.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

What Lots Of People Do Not Know About Hair Replacement

By Carmella Koury


Male pattern baldness, is easily the most common form of the alopecia infection, which in simple terms is hair loss. Hair replacement or transplantation is the best response to this ailment after, of course, any number of other approaches have been tried. Know simply this, that it is a process that takes some time, and one in which you will have to be cooperating with the doctor for the while length of time.

A lot of people, when they hear about how difficult hair replacement, prefer to opt out. What they are missing is the fact that this simple but lengthy process is about their best bet for getting their lost hair back. If you ask me, I'd sooner give ten years and live the rest of my life with a full mane, than give it all up and be bald for life.

Hair replacement surgery is more or less removing skin from one part of the body to replace skin on another part. If you have a doctor who has been into face lifts for a while, you know already that you are in safe hands. The skin in the part of your body where you are not growing hair is removed and replaced with fresher and livelier skin from a part of your body where your hair still grow fine enough.

If you have had previous hair transplants, you might want to talk to your doc about the possibility of undergoing another series of those. You'd be surprised how many Americans keep such vital secrets from their physicians, and it can only be to their own detriment. If the surgeon does not know how many times you have done it before, they cannot operate with the necessary amount of care needed. The bottom line is that you, not the doc, will be the one to get hurt if you conceal such important information from them.

For perfectly understandable reasons, medical personnel back in time never thought that transplanted hair would thrive well in a region where the original hair had failed, so they did not give hair replacement a lot of serious thought. However, mankind never got as far as they have by giving up. Someone put some more work into it - some New Yorker called Norman Orentreich - shortly after the second big one. And voila! Here it is, hair transplantation, just the way you love it.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment