Armando wrote:
"My friends Michael and Bryan;
Are you agree that scalp reduction is the best "hair trasplant"? There is not injuries at all and we change only the position of scalp hairs.
Do you want ask Mr. Foote for its results?
.
And finally, Probe us the "suppossed" genetical differences in healthy scalp hairs.
Armando"
Scalp reductions stretch the skin badly, often resulting in a death of skin under the hair and purple dead skin. Scalp reductions also just pull skin and stretch it upwards and forewards-------------------but neglects that the hippocratic wreath itself is still shrinking if the man is not finished balding yet and the wreath is not down to its "final" state. Almost 100% of scalp reduction procedures result in "Stretch back" and is a procedure that produces huge scars and is one to avoid. Read about it here,
http://www.americanhairloss.org/surgica ... _avoid.asp from the American Hairloss Association.
Down the page (scroll) are pictures of a typical bad scalp reduction with the infamous "Y" result,
http://www.bernsteinmedical.com/hair-tr ... -scars.php
Look at the things the American Hairloss Association says are terrible about the scalp reduction or "flap" surgery,
1 Flap/Hair Flap
A flap of hair bearing skin is moved from the side of the scalp to the front hairline by cutting it on three sides, thus not separating it from it’s blood supply or severing it completely from the scalp. The procedure is major surgery and is performed in a hospital. A flap is one inch wide and approximately three to seven inches long. It has to be twisted in order for the hair bearing side of the flap to end up facing outward from the head once it shifted over and stitched into the surgically removed balding area. A unsightly “knot†will always form where the flap has to be twisted. Other serious problem include:
• Necrosis: A very real chance of partial or complete death of the flap, leaving a horrific scar.
• Hair always grows in the opposite direction of a normal hairline.
• Infection
• Permanent shock loss and extreme scaring in the donor area
• Loosened skin in the forehead develops and hangs over the brow, giving a Frankenstein or Neanderthal appearance.
• Absence of hair behind the newly created frontal airline.
• Poor positioning of the flap (extremely common)
• The front hairline scar always has to be re-grafted to hide a linear scar.
• Integrity of the scalp is always compromised.
A type of flap known as the free-form flap is created when all fours side are cut and the flap is completely removed from the donor area so that it’s new position in the balding area can be set in a direction of natural growth. This is not a procedure recommended for men/women with common androgenic alopecia and should be reserved for severely disfigured patients such as burn or accident victims.
If your hair restoration surgeon offers his procedure for common hair loss, leave immediately.
Armando wrote: "OTOH, sebaceous gland is vital for hair, A evidence: transplatation of only hair is a mistake, Only works follicular unity trasplantation including sebaceous gland"
Congradulations Armando, you just disproved your own ridiculous Baldness theory. Sebaceous glands ARE INDEED moved with follicular units with moder hair transplantaion, and the hairs grow for all your life........................the "sebum" doesn't get "blocked, inhibited, backed up" or any of the other cockamamie things you claim. The hair doesn't fall out like the hair it was moved to replace, despite being on top of the head where the old hair miniaturized.
The "supposed" genetic differences are expressed in the fact that hair doesnt fall out in the wreath (but it does thin somewhat), and when wreath hair is moved to another place, it still grows. When male pattern baldness hair is moved (as the RU59941 study shows), it does not regrow for a second phase but 2% of the time on its own.