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Transplant
Hair Graft: What is it?
Maybe you've heard the term Hair Graft before. Let's take a look
at exactly what hair grafts are, and what role they play in the
surgical hair restoration process.
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What is a Hair Graft?
During hair transplant surgery, small grafts of skin containing hair
follicles are removed from the areas of permanent hair in the back and
on the sides of the head, and moved to the areas where balding or thinning
occurs. The grafts are placed into openings created in the bald area
where hair is desired. The openings can be slits (incisions where tissue
is not removed), a punch hole, or laser hole (where recipient tissue
is actually removed or destroyed). Both the size of the grafts and the
size of the wounds where they are placed have become smaller over the
past 40 years. This decrease in size has made the transplants dramatically
more natural in appearance.
The way the transplanted hair follicle behaves differs from most other
"organ" transplants. When kidney, heart or liver transplants
are performed, the person receiving the transplant must remain on powerful
immune suppressing medications to prevent rejection, as the organs are
generally transplanted from one person to another. Since a hair transplant
is an "autograft," (a transplant from one part of the body
to another) there is no rejection and no medications are required.

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Recommended
Resources |
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- Ask questions and get information on Hair Transplants
in our Men's
Forums and Women's
Forums!
- Information provided courtesy of the New
Hair Institute, taken from "The Patient's Guide to
Hair Transplantation" William R. Rassman, MD and Robert
M. Bernstein, MD
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