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Women’s qualification for hair restoration

 Women's qualification for hair restoration

  

No woman who begins losing her hair ever considers herself lucky, it is one of the worst fears that any woman can ever have to deal with. A man watching himself grow bald might not feel the same way a woman would feel. The social effects that baldness imposes on women have much higher impacts than they do on men. Women who lose their hair for instance lose their self-esteem; they do not feel motivated and always have a feeling that their beauty has been completely compromised.

Replacement of lost hair has proven over time to be very successful generally, but more successful among men. With various ways of hair restoration, both medical and surgical available, there would be very little need for worry. Hair transplantation is one sure way and relief to women who suffer from hair loss. Today, there have been advancements in technology and transplantation that assure patients of successful transplant surgery. Surgeons can nowadays transplant follicular units (1 to 4 hairs) to bring a natural look that would not easily attract attention. It is therefore no doubt that there are good doctors who can restore ones hair properly and make any woman suffering from hair loss get back her good looks.

Hair restoration is very common today, there are many online medical counselors who can help you find

 

best hair transplant clinics and best cost of hair transplant in Chennai. This will help you compare the costs of different clinics and choose the best one.

There are however challenges that are associated with restoration of women hair. To begin with, most women do not have the kind of hair that would make them qualified for hair transplant. Women often have thinning all over their head. The sides of the head and back which often form the main donor sites among men are also thinned in women. With thinning in all these areas, it is therefore hard to extract hair for transplantation to other parts of one’s head.

In women pattern baldness, the donor sites are normally unstable. They are always thinning similar to other head parts. Follicle-killing DHT affects women’s donor areas. What this implies is that removal of hair and follicles that accompany it from donor areas among women and then transplanting them to other different areas will only lead to them falling out. It is only unethical doctors with intentions of soliciting funds from desperate patients who would dare take a woman with a donor site that is unstable through transplantation. That would be a complete taking of economic advantage, which is very unprofessional.

Difference in pattern baldness that determine surgeries also differ between these two genders. Women who experience hair loss end up keeping the frontal hairline, a direct contrast of what happen among males. Women are not worried about the need for framing their faces through a hair transplant; they are instead so much worried about losing a big volume of hair from the back and top. Now that is the problem, since hair transplants don’t help much in increasing the volume of hair on the head, they merely focus on moving hair from a place to another.

Medical experts have advised severally that around 2 to 5% only of women who undergo the procedure

 

of transplantation are likely to benefit, because of the complications in women discussed earlier. It would therefore be necessary for any woman to assess herself of her qualifications for candidacy of transplantation before opting to go through the procedure. So what are these qualifications?

The first who qualify for the transplant are those women who lost their hair due to mechanical reasons or non hormonal causes such as traction Alopecia. This is where hair has been lost as a result of force that is applied to it in the process of its handling, for instance; when combing ones hair, hair is pulled and some hair may be lost during the process. Those who fall victim to this have an option of restoration.

Those women who previously have undergone cosmetic surgery or even plastic surgery but are getting concerned about loss of hair around the areas of incision are also potential candidates.

There are also those having a clear baldness pattern just like those shared by men. These may include vertex thinning, hairline recession and donor areas that androgenetic Alopecia do not have an effect on. Some women are victims of hair loss due to trauma. Such include burn victims. These are eligible for transplanting. Scarring as a result of accidents and those from chemical burns are also eligible to go through the restoration process. Women with a condition known as alopecia marginalis, which leads to hair loss at the hairline and is commonly transient, are also eligible candidates for transplant.

It is very important that any woman suffering from hair loss and wishing to go through the restoration process should consider the qualifications mentioned here before wasting time with an unethical doctor who will squander their money and give no results. It’s a precaution that everyone has to take.

 
 
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Ivelina

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