Saratoga Hair Transplant
 

 

 

 

Home

What is Hair Transplantation?
(Hair Transplant Surgery)

Our Philosophy

Importance of the Front Hairline

About the Surgeon

"Walk through" Tour
of a Typical Session

About the Consultation

Photo Gallery I (Men)
Photo Gallery II (Men)
Photo Gallery III (Men)
Photo Gallery IV (Men)
Photo Gallery V (Men)

Frontal Forelock Gallery I
Frontal Forelock Gallery II
Frontal Forelock Gallery III

Temples Photo Gallery

Hair Transplants for Women

Women's Photo Gallery I
Women's Photo Gallery II
Women's Photo Gallery III

Corrective Hair
Transplant Work

Corrective Photo Gallery I
Corrective Photo Gallery II
Corrective Photo Gallery III
Corrective Photo Gallery IV

Crown/vertex Transplantation

Crown/vertex
Transplantation Gallery

Follicular Unit Extraction

Eyebrow Transplantation

Eyebrow Photo Gallery

Research by Dr. Beehner

Financial Information

Contact us

Directions to the Office

Additional Topics:

- Limited role of scalp reductions
- Use of Propecia/Rogaine
-
Transition from a hairpiece to hair transplants
- Temple area transplantation
- Trans-gender Transplantation
- About Donor Scars
   

Links

Saratoga Hair

60 Railroad Place Suite 102 Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
Phone: 518-581-1872 Toll Free: 1-800-281-9198
e-mail: saratogahair@spa.net

Donor Scars: Keeping them fine and undetectable

We feel it is important to devote a few words on this site to the topic of donor scars. If the hair surgeon is skillful in the placement of his donor harvest path and keeps its width under one centimeter in the side areas and at the two rear corners, then these should be consistently very narrow and undetectable, even with wearing the hair reasonably short.

(to see enlarged view of transplant patients click the desired photo)
"Patient A"
8 months after HT#1
Hair styled at
normal length
totally conceals scar
"Patient A"
Hair lifted to show
old donor scar
"Patient A"
Hair just above old
scar shaved, in
preparation for
donor harvest at
second procedure
"Patient A"
Going home that
same day, with
sutures in place.

There will always be a tiny percentage of patients, perhaps 5%, who have very rubbery and hyper-elastic skin, who will stretch to slightly wider donor scars, but usually we can predict ahead of time who these persons are and at the very least warn them of it and make sure that they are willing to wear their hair sufficiently long to hide any evidence that might result. For 95% of patients, keeping the strip narrow and using a double layer closure technique has resulted, in our hands, in consistently thin scars which are patients have been very happy with.

(to see enlarged view of transplant patients click the desired photo)
"Patient B"
8 months after
second transplant;
hair lifted to show
resultant scar
"Patient B"
Donor hair shaved;
scar from first two
procedures noted
as thin line near
bottom of shaved
area.

 

(to see enlarged view of transplant patients click the desired photo)
"Patient C"
8 months after
HT#1, scar is
present in area
where hair is
lifted up
"Patient C"
Same day;
Scar now able
to be seen near
bottom of
shaved area.
"Patient C "
Shows sutures in
place, after shaved
area removed
along with
old scar.

 

When we do second or third procedures, we always take the new strip from exactly above the old scar, usually removing the old scar in the process, so that, when the entire hair transplant procedure is completed, there is just one narrow scar resulting.

(to see enlarged view of transplant patients click the desired photo)
"Patient D"
7 months after
HT#1. Scar is in
area where hair
is lifted.
"Patient D "
Close-up of scar
after that area
shaved prior to
donor harvest
at HT#2.

This is possible if one maintains around a 6-10 month interval between procedures, so that the scalp has a chance to regain its original laxity.

(to see enlarged view of transplant patients click the desired photo)
"Patient E"
Donor scar one
year after HT#3,
with hair lifted
up for closer exam.

The problem of wide donor scars occurs when one attempts to take too wide of a strip or if the surgeon goes back in to reharvest the next strip only 3-4 months after the last one. Several examples of our scars are shown on this page.

(to see enlarged view of transplant patients click the desired photo)
"Patient F"
Female patient,
one year after HT#1.
Very thin scar present
in area where hair
lifted up
"Patient F"
Same patient; with donor
hair shaved, can barely
make out paper-thin scar
near bottom of shaved
area from old donor scar.