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Mr. Simpson/Viola Hair Color (gray) and Transplants
Joe Viola
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REGIONAL VOCATIONAL TECHNICAL SCHOOLS


Health & Wellness Resource Center

Hair transplantation


Source Citation: "Hair transplantation." Altha Roberts Edgren. The Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine. Ed. Jacqueline L. Longe. 3rd ed. Detroit: Gale, 2006. 5 vols.

Table of Contents

Definition | Purpose | Precautions | Description | Preparation | Aftercare | Key Terms | Risks | Normal Results | Abnormal Results | For More Information

Definition

Hair transplantation is a surgical procedure used to treat baldness or hair loss. Typically, tiny patches of scalp are removed from the back and sides of the head and implanted in the bald spots in the front and top of the head.

Purpose

Hair transplantation is a cosmetic procedure performed on men (and occasionally on women) who have significant hair loss, thinning hair, or bald spots where hair no longer grows. In men, hair loss and baldness are most commonly due to genetic factors (a tendency passed on in families) and age. Male pattern baldness, in which the hairline gradually recedes to expose more and more of the forehead, is the most common form. Men may also experience a gradual thinning of hair at the crown or very top of the skull. For women, hair loss is more commonly due to hormonal changes and is more likely to be a thinning of hair from the entire head. An estimated 50,000 men get transplants each year. Transplants can also be done to replace hair lost due to burns, injury, or diseases of the scalp.

Precautions

Although hair transplantation is a fairly simple procedure, some risks are associated with any surgery. It is important to inform the physician about any medications currently being used and about previous allergic reactions to drugs or anesthetic agents. Patients with blood clotting disorders also need to inform their physician before the procedure is performed.

Description

Hair transplantation surgery is performed by a physician in an office, clinic, or hospital setting. Each surgery lasts two to three hours during which approximately 250 grafts will be transplanted. A moderately balding man may require up to 1,000 grafts to get good coverage of a bald area, so a series of surgeries scheduled three to four months apart is usually required. The patient may be completely awake during the procedure with just a local anesthetic drug applied to numb the areas of the scalp. Some patients may be given a drug to help them relax or may be given an anesthetic drug that puts them to sleep.

The most common transplant procedure uses a thin strip of hair and scalp from the back of the head. This strip is cut into smaller clumps of five or six hairs. Tiny cuts are made in the balding area of the scalp and a clump is implanted into each slit. The doctor performing the surgery will attempt to recreate a natural looking hairline along the forehead. Minigrafts, micrografts, or implants of single hair follicles can be used to fill in between larger implant sites and can provide a more natural-looking hairline. The implants will also be arranged so that thick and thin hairs are interspersed and the hair will grow in the same direction.

Another type of hair replacement surgery is called scalp reduction. This involves removing some of the skin from the hairless area and "stretching" some of the nearby hair-covered scalp over the cut-away area.

Health insurance will not pay for hair transplants that are done for cosmetic reasons. Insurance may pay for hair replacement surgery to correct hair loss due to accident, burn, or disease.

Hair transplantation

The most common hair transplant procedure involves taking small strips of scalp containing hair follicles from the donor area, usually at the sides or back of the head. These strips are then divided into several hundred smaller grafts. The surgeon relocates these grafts containing skin, follicle, and hair to tiny holes in the balding area by using microsurgical instruments or lasers.

(Illustration by Electronic Illustrators Group.)

It is important to be realistic about what the final result of a hair transplant will look like. This procedure does not create new hair, it simply redistributes the hair that the patient still has. Some research has been conducted where chest hair has been transplanted to the balding scalp, but this procedure is not widely practiced.

Preparation

It is important to find a respected, well-established, experienced surgeon and discuss the expected results prior to the surgery. The patient may need blood tests to check for bleeding or clotting problems and may be asked not to take aspirin products before the surgery. The type of anesthesia used will depend on how extensive the surgery will be and where it will be performed. The patient may be awake during the procedure, but may be given medication to help them relax. A local anesthetic drug which numbs the area will be applied or injected into the skin at the surgery sites.

Aftercare

The area may need to be bandaged overnight. The patient can return to normal activities; however, strenuous activities should be avoided in the first few days after the surgery. On rare occasions, the implants can be "ejected" from the scalp during vigorous exercise. There may be some swelling, bruising, headache, and discomfort around the graft areas and around the eyes. These symptoms can usually be controlled with a mild pain reliever like aspirin. Scabs may form at the graft sites and should not be scraped off. There may be some numbness at the sites, but it will diminish within two to three months.

Key Terms

TermDefinition
Anesthetic agents

Medication or drugs that can be injected with a needle or rubbed onto and area to make it numb before a surgical procedure. Anesthesia drugs may also be given by mouth, breathed in as a gas, or injected into a vein or muscle to make a patient relaxed or unconscious.

Hair follicle

A tube-like indentation in the skin from which a single hair grows.

Minigraft or micrograft

Transplantation of a small number of hair follicles, as few as one to three hairs, into a transplant site.

Transplantation

Surgically cutting out hair follicles and replanting them in a different spot on the head.

Risks

Although there are rare cases of infection or scarring, the major risk is probably that the grafted area does not look the way the patient expected it to look.

Normal results

The transplanted hair will fall out within a few weeks, however, new hair will start to grow in the graft sites within about three months. A normal rate of hair growth is about 0.25-0.5 in (6-13 mm) per month.

Abnormal results

Major complications as a result of hair transplantation are extremely rare. Occasionally, a patient may have problems with delayed healing, infection, scarring, or rejection of the graft; but this is uncommon.

For More Information

Organizations

  • American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery. 401 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, IL 60611-4267. (313) 527-6713. http://www.cosmeticsurgeryonline.com.

  • American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. 1110 Vermont Avenue NW, Suite 220, Washington, DC 20005. (800) 332-3223.

Other

  • "Hair Transplant." Ienhance. http://www.ienhance.com.

  • "Transplants; Flap Surgery; and The Perfect Candidate." Transplant Network. http://www.hair-transplants.net.


Record Number: DU2601000614


© Copyright  2008  Gale Cengage Learning

 




 

 


REGIONAL VOCATIONAL TECHNICAL SCHOOLS

 

Health & Wellness Resource Center


The myth of stress and hair color.

Harvard Health Commentaries.  August 21, 2006 pNA.

 


Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2006 Copyright by President and Fellows of Harvard College. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Myth of Stress and Hair Color

If you have gray hair, you may remember the first one a wiry, unruly, conspicuous surprise. Perhaps it made you feel older, or maybe it seemed more like a badge of honor, proof of your seniority, wisdom, and experience.

My father used to say that before he had children he had no gray hair, suggesting that his graying hair was a result of the stress my siblings and I had heaped upon him. And yet, I never learned anything in medical school to support the idea that worry or stress caused gray hair. Is it a myth passed down from aging adults to remind children of the trouble they've caused their gray-haired parents? Are relaxed, laid-back people less likely to turn gray than others? And is turning gray inevitable, or can it be prevented? Finally, what of the stories of people turning gray overnight?

The Color of Hair

The color of hair matters more than you may realize. Beyond its cosmetic role, it may also provide insulation and ward off harmful ultraviolet light. The determination of hair color is complicated. Melanocytes, cells that live in the upper layers of the skin and at the base of hair follicles, produce pigment (called melanin) that creates the coloring of hair. They produce two types of melanin: eumelanin, a brown-black pigment, and pheomelanin, a yellow-red pigment. The genes you inherit from your parents determine the exact mix of pigments that your melanocytes produce, which accounts for the similarity of hair color shared by family members.

How Hair Turns Gray

Once a hair is produced by a hair follicle, its color does not change -- so while a head of hair can turn gray over time, an individual hair doesn't actually turn gray. An individual hair may be pigmented (brown, black, red, blonde), white (because the melanocytes have "run out" of pigment) or gray (when the amount of pigment is reduced). That's why the chemicals and dyes applied to hair may alter its color temporarily, but once the hair has grown out, its true color is again evident at the roots. Ordinarily, gray hairs are hidden among the pigmented hairs, becoming more obvious only as the pigmented hairs fall out over a prolonged period of time. The different texture of gray hair is due to reduced moisture that accompanies reduced pigment.

Why melanocytes stop producing enough melanin is not entirely clear. Part of it may be related to "apoptosis," a term that means the death of a cell triggered by the cell itself after a certain amount of time. Whatever the reason, melanocytes lose capacity at about 10 percent to 20 percent per decade; the first gray hairs may show up in teen-age years, but more commonly they appear between ages 35 and 50. Men gray sooner than women, but the tendency to gray early, late or not at all also depends in part on the genes inherited from parents. One's ethnic background matters as well. There is variability among different populations. For example, Caucasians tend to develop gray hair sooner than Asian or African people. Another mystery: Gray hair generally crops up first at the temples, then the top of the head, spreading out from there to the rest of the scalp.

Hair may seem to become gray faster if the normal process of "shedding" speeds up, and that is just what happens in a relatively common condition called "telogen effluvium". Instead of losing about 100 hairs per day as is normal, 300 hairs fall out daily. This may be triggered by a significant illness or other major stress to the body. In those situations, a head of hair that was minimally gray becomes more dramatically gray in a short period because the darker hairs have fallen out preferentially.

Reversing The Inevitable

There are situations in which graying of hair can be reversed. In certain conditions, such as severe eczema or certain infections of the scalp, or after radiation therapy or chemotherapy, hair that was gray may re-grow with its former color (http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/7228/353406.html). Early in the process of graying, a gray hair may fall out and be replaced with a normally pigmented hair. And melanocytes that are producing little or no melanin in the scalp can be removed and stimulated in the laboratory to make melanin. Together, these observations suggest the aging melanocyte retains the capacity to increase the pigment it makes even after its output starts to decline. Some researchers believe that with a better understanding of how and why gray hair develops, it may be possible to reverse or even prevent it.

Other Hair-Color Problems

Did you know that hair can be turned green by swimming pool water? It's thought that copper in the water or from pipes, or chemicals put in the water to kill algae, can turn hair green. It's more common among frequent swimmers who have blonde, white or gray hair; fortunately it is reversible (though you may have to find another pool until the source of the problem is identified and corrected). In addition, certain medications or supplements can promote hair loss, revealing more white or gray hair in their wake. Lithium and amphetamines are mentioned as frequent offenders. Vitamin E and echinacea are also reported to cause graying of hair, although I could find no published confirmation in scientific journals or information regarding which dose or duration of therapy has been linked to graying.

Gray Hair As A Sign Of Illness

The vast majority of people with gray hair have age-related graying. However, sometimes graying of the hair indicates an illness, especially if it occurs at a particularly young age. A number of illnesses may be heralded by gray hair, including:

Vitamin B12 deficiency

Neurofibromatosis. Also called Von Recklinghausen's disease, this is a group of inherited diseases in which tumors grow along nerves. Developmental abnormalities may be observed, including that of skin and bones.

Tuberous sclerosis. An unusual, inherited condition associated with benign tumors in multiple organs (including the brain, heart, kidneys, eyes, lung and skin)

Thyroid disease (http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH?t=11133&p=%7Ebr,IHW%7C%7Est,24479%7C%7Er,WSIHW000%7C%7Eb,*%7C)

Vitiligo A condition of unknown cause in which melanocytes are lost or destroyed perhaps because the immune system "misfires" and attacks the skin rather than an infection. If the scalp is involved, areas of white hair may develop.

Alopecia areata (http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH?t=32092&p=%7Ebr,IHW%7C%7Est,24479%7C%7Er,WSIHW000%7C%7Eb,*%7C). Another "autoimmune" disorder in which patches of hair may be suddenly lost, especially the pigmented hairs. This may lead to the "overnight" graying because previously present gray or white hairs suddenly become more obvious. When hair growth resumes, it may be write or gray, but normally pigmented hair may eventually return.

In addition, there is research linking premature graying of hair to a number of other health conditions such as heart disease and low bone mass (called osteopenia), a precursor of osteoporosis (http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH?t=9564&p=%7Ebr,IHW%7C%7Est,24479%7C%7Er,WSIHW000%7C%7Eb,*%7C), although how they are connected is unclear. Cigarette smoking also has been linked to premature graying.

Stress and Graying

As with most medical myths, there is an element of truth to the notion that stress can lead to graying hair. For the most part, however, it is untrue. Because a hair shaft cannot change color once it has grown in (unless exposed to chemicals that change its color, a regular event at hair salons), hair cannot suddenly turn gray with or without stress. However, alopecia areata and telogen effluvium can lead to pigmented hair loss, and stress has long been considered a trigger of these conditions (though not confirmed by recent research). As a result, an emotionally stressful event rarely can trigger loss of darker hair, leaving behind gray and white hair that is suddenly more noticeable. However, this is the exception, not the rule. Much more often, stress (or lack of stress) has little known effect on one's hair unless, of course, you're so on edge you pull it out.

The Bottom Line

How hair grows, ages and changes color over time is a complicated process. While it is possible that stress matters, it is unlikely to play a critical role. Everyone has stress, yet not everyone has gray hair. Current understanding suggests that there are more important influences on the color of hair than stress, worry or anxiety. A host of genetic and environmental influences can affect your hair color, although the precise reason one person's hair turns gray while others never develop gray hair remains a mystery.

As a matter of coincidence, adults often raise their children at about the time that they notice their first gray hairs. But that doesn't mean kids are the cause of their parents' gray hair. There were many things my parents could rightfully blame on me, but turning their hair gray was not one of them. In fact, because hair color and graying may be inherited, it is much more likely that I can blame my gray hair on them


Record Number: A169434186

 


© Copyright  2008  Gale Cengage Learning