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  •  Follow Torrance’s Battle Against Bald at his Bosley hair loss blog, BattleAgainstBald.com, a blog documenting real battles against hair loss, which we take head-on (pun intended) by going through the Bosley hair restoration procedure. Disclosure: all procedures sponsored and performed by Bosley.Torrance

  • Follow Seth Garon’s Battle Against Bald at his Bosley hair loss blog, BattleAgainstBald.com, a blog documenting real battles against hair loss, which we take head-on (pun intended) by going through the Bosley hair restoration procedure. Disclosure: all procedures sponsored and performed by Bosley.Seth

  • Battle Against Bald is a blog documenting real battles against hair loss, which we take head-on (pun intended) by going through the Bosley hair restoration procedure.

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  • Our procedures were sponsored and performed by Bosley. To learn more about hair restoration, contact Bosley at 800-249-6946 or visit the Bosley website

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  • Seth Garon works in Portland, Oregon as Creative Director at Respond2, which is one of Bosley’s marketing agencies. Respond2 is financially compensated for generating and managing the content surrounding this blog. Seth did not pay for his procedure. All the content surrounding the blog is based on Seth’s personal opinion and does not necessarily represent the views of Bosley.
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« My Hair Restoration Results and Family's Reaction | Main | Videos from my Bosley Hair Restoration Consultation »

Q: How does Follicular Unit Grafting Work?

For all my readers beginning their research on hair restoration, I wanted to write an introductory blog entry about Follicular Unit Grafting.  Follicular Unit Grafting (or Follicular Unit Transplantation) is the most popular procedure used by hair restoration surgeons world wide.

How Does Follicular Unit Grafting Work? In a Nutshell!

First, the hair restoration surgeon removes a small strip of hair from a donor area at the back of the patients head (where there's an abundance of hair), this is called the suture or donor strip. Next, the donor area is carefully stitched to limit the appearance of a scar (if this concerns you, refer to The Invisible Bosley Hair Restoration Scar entry). Next, naturally occurring groups of 1-4 hairs are removed from the donor area and prepared for implantation. Finally, each individual follicular group of hairs are strategically implanted to recreate the patient's natural hairline. Artistry is essential when implanting the follicles.

Before the days of follicular unit grafting (back in the 80s and early 90s), hair restoration surgeons used a technique called “mini-micrografting.” Mini-micrografting worked by extracting a combination of mini-grafts (4-12 hairs) and micro-grafts (1-3 hairs) from the back of the patient's head and implanted them to the balding area. Results were less than perfect and some patients complained about non-natural looking hair transplants. At this time, hair transplantation surgeries received a bad reputation for providing plug-like procedures, some even say early hair restoration procedures came out looking like dolls' heads.

Today there is less to worry about when considering a hair restoration procedure. Follicular unit grafting is an industry standard and thanks to collective knowledge sharing between specialists around the world, there continues to be a lot innovation.

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Comments

i just had frontal hair transplant done. Most docs say that they can only restore about 50% density of the origibal amount ,before hair fell out. also, sometimes it takes 2 surgeries. Does that mean that the first time, they can only do about 25% density, and then a second surgery, to bring it to 50% ensity?
Also, how long before you can do another one. the place i went to says in 3 months. What I odnt like is the shock loss of hair, after the first one. its been a month, and it looks like i lost a lot of hair

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