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Home | Hair Loss Treatments | Surgical Hair Restoration
| FUE
Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE)FUE – a new way of doing Follicular Unit Hair Transplantation Follicular unit extraction is a minimally invasive procedure for performing follicular unit hair transplantation. However, unlike the predominant follicular unit transplant procedure, in which a strip of donor tissue is removed and dissected under magnification, the FUE procedure uses a small punch to extract each follicular unit one by one. Both the strip excision and FUE procedures create 1, 2, 3, and 4 hair follicular unit grafts that are then transplanted into the balding area in the same manner. The primary difference between these two procedures is the technique used to harvest the follicular unit grafts. Comparing the Strip Excision procedure to the Extraction (FUE) procedure The common strip excision method of performing follicular unit hair transplantation involves surgically excising a thin horizontal strip of bald resistant skin from the donor area.
This donor area is then sutured together. These sutures (either stitches
or staples) are then typically removed about ten days after surgery. Some
physicians use dissolvable sutures so that no removal is needed.
Once this linear incision is fully healed the patient is left with a
thin horizontal scar in the back of the head. This scar is typically hard
to detect since the surrounding hair conceals it, even when the hair is
cut short. With the Follicular Unit Extraction or FUE procedure 1, 2, 3, and 4 hair
follicular unit grafts are carefully extracted one at a time using a tiny
punch of one millimeter or less. Often the surgeon requires the patient
to buzz cut a portion of their donor area so that they are able to see
the patient’s scalp.
The follicular units are extracted by placing the punch around a single follicular unit and cutting a small circle through the skin around that follicular unit. The follicular unit is then gently pulled up and away from the loose tissue underneath the skin. The small hole left behind after the follicle is extracted then heals over
the following week. Normally this small round incision contracts as it heals
making the resulting round scar smaller than the size of the 1mm punch that
made the incision. The FUE patient ultimately ends up with hundreds of small
round white scars, which are normally not detectable once the patient’s
hair grows out. |
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