| Traditional
Hair Transplantation relied on the redistribution of scalp hair
follicles from donor regions of higher density such as the back
and sides of the scalp to the balding regions. This was fine when
the donor regions could provide enough yield to cover the balding
region. Thus those with sparser donor sites were less fortunate
and the coverage available would be less if any, than desirable.
Studies have found that donor sites in other regions of the body
have been successfully transplanted to the scalp. This relocated
follicle once transplanted into the scalp region attains the characteristic
of regular scalp hair rather than the character of the donor site.
The technique used is called Follicular
Unit Extraction (FUE). This revolutionary technique has provided
hope for those who have poor donor scalp hair density but an abundance
of body hair.
The FUE technique is more time consuming than Follicular Strip Extraction
(FSE) as a a follicular units are harvested individually from the
donor site and transplanted individually into the recipient site.
Since it is more time consuming, fewer follicular units can be transplanted
at any given sitting.
Even thought the technique is slower, there are heralded benefits;
| a) |
Harvesting via FUE is less
invasive than strip harvesting and therefore results in a speedier
donor recovery time. |
| b) |
Technique allows harvesting from alternate
regions of the body and results in minimal scarring. |
| c) |
The opportunity of using body hair
in the scalp region provides new hope for those individuals
with sparse donor scalp hair. |
|