How to Fix a Bad hair transplant

When hair transplant surgery was first introduced, some five decades ago, the hair loss patients hoped to cover their bald heads in a natural way and look young again. Although initially it was quite expensive, those who could afford I rushed to the surgeons offering the procedure. The surgeon's did help them regain hair on bald thatches, but the technique was not fine enough to give them a natural looking hairline. Consequently, they ended up with pluggy, unnatural looking hair.
Now you must be wondering why hair transplant back then were not successful, while today the same procedure is giving highly natural looking results. Hair transplantation techniques initially used involved transplanting grafts containing multiple follicles and this resulted in "baby doll" pluggy hairlines. Some techniques also involved transplanting hair-bearing pieces of skin to cover the bald patches. This is the reason most of early transplant cases are not aesthetically pleasing. Besides creating unnatural looking pluggy hairlines, the older hair transplant techniques resulted in numerous other problems as well, that are hard to conceal, even with hairstyle changes. Some common problems include:

Read more about Dubai hair transplant


  1. Unnatural hair direction
  2. Too high or too low hairline
  3. Inconsistent hair growth
  4. Hairless patches in the transplanted area
  5. Unnatural scalp coverage
  6. Prominent scars at the donor and/or recipient site


Sometimes the hair transplant results were so unappealing and disturbing that people wished to go hairless again, only if it was possible. If you are also a victim of the obsolete hair restoration techniques, don't worry. With advancements in technology, fixing bad transplants is very much possible. Techniques like Fue transplant (FUE) and Stem Cell FUE have made repairing and fixing bad transplants a lot easier and successful.


Share on Google Plus

About Unknown

    Blogger Comment
    Facebook Comment

0 comments: