FAQ
Before choosing your surgeon, be sure to ask everything you need and receive clear, accurate answers. Do not forget to check pictures of patients that the surgeon has operated on and find out how many sessions you performed in these patients. Confirm that the doctor is a specialist and meets all legal and biosafety standards. Do not take hasty decisions.
Make a duty to investigate.
1. What hair types are there?
2. IS IT THE SAME A (FUT) TRANSPLANTATION WITH A MINI OR MICRO IMPLANTS?
3. RISK?
4. Baldness affects?
5. SHOULD PREVENT SOME PEOPLE THE HAIR TRANSPLANT SURGERY?
6. Does it hurt?
7. Fix botched hair transplants?
8. SHOULD I WAIT UNTIL I COMPLETE HAIR LOSS TO BECOME A CANDIDATE FOR THIS SURGERY?
9. What recent advances have been made in the field of hair restoration?
10. WHAT ARE THE LIMITATIONS OF THE TRANSPLANT?
11. How much hair can be transplanted?
12. WHAT IS FOLLICULAR UNIT?
13. HOW MANY FOLLICLES DO I NEED?
WHAT IS FOLLICULAR UNIT?
2010-01-25 10:36:53
The follicular unit is made for one to four roots hair, sebaceous glands, arrector pili muscles, a peri-follicular vascular plexus, a neural network and peri follicle (circumferential wrap thin collagen that defines the unit).
To transplant the most natural way to transplant grafts must be in the form of follicular units. Given the aesthetics of capillary anatomy we know that the closer we get to the front line, Follicular Units have less hair (unicapilares) and as we progress into the back of these units are two to four hairs.
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