Hair Restoration Surgery: The State of the Art
Open Access
- 1 January 2013
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Aesthetic Surgery Journal
- Vol. 33 (1) , 128-151
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1090820x12468314
Abstract
Hair restoration is a highly sophisticated subspecialty that offers significant relief to patients with hair loss. An improved understanding of the aesthetics of hair loss and cosmetic hair restoration, hair anatomy and physiology, and the development of microvascular surgical instrumentation has revolutionized the approach to surgical hair restoration since the original description. Additional elements that contribute to the current state of the art in hair restoration include graft size, site creation, packing density, and medical control of hair loss. The results of hair restoration are natural in appearance and are provided with a very high level of patient satisfaction and safety. This aspect of cosmetic surgery is a very welcome addition to a traditional aesthetic practice and serves as a tremendous source for internal cross-referral. The future of hair restoration surgery is centered on minimal-incision surgery as well as cell-based therapies.Keywords
This publication has 79 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evaluation of efficacy and safety of finasteride 1 mg in 3177 Japanese men with androgenetic alopeciaThe Journal of Dermatology, 2011
- 5-α reductase inhibitors and prostate cancer prevention: where do we turn now?BMC Medicine, 2011
- SnapShot: Hair Follicle Stem CellsCell, 2011
- Hair follicle dermal papilla cells at a glanceJournal of Cell Science, 2011
- Bald scalp in men with androgenetic alopecia retains hair follicle stem cells but lacks CD200-rich and CD34-positive hair follicle progenitor cellsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2011
- The Basement Membrane of Hair Follicle Stem Cells Is a Muscle Cell NicheCell, 2011
- Dynamics between Stem Cells, Niche, and Progeny in the Hair FollicleCell, 2011
- Finasteride Does Not Increase the Risk of High-Grade Prostate Cancer: A Bias-Adjusted Modeling ApproachCancer Prevention Research, 2008
- Approach to the adult female patient with diffuse nonscarring alopeciaJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 2002
- Postmenopausal frontal fibrosing alopecia: A frontal variant of lichen planopilarisJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1997