Fue Hair transplant in ln Lahore pakistan
Hair Transplant Recipient Site Creation
Hair Recipient Site Creation
Hair recipient sites are defined as the sites where the hair grafts are inserted. Creating superior recipient sites is mandatory to achieve consistently excellent results in hair restoration. We creates all of his own recipient sites himself.
Why are recipient sites so important? The way that recipient sites is created will dictate the angle, distribution, and appropriate size of each inserted graft. If recipient sites are poorly created, the angles and distribution of the hair can be very unnatural looking. In order to create excellent recipient sites every single time, the surgeon must have a keen sense of artistry, e.g., how to shape and pattern a natural hairline that will fit one’s face and type of hair loss, and a profound understanding of how hair grows differently in each part of the scalp, e.g., the hairline (also male versus female), the temples, the lateral hump, the mid scalp, the vertex transition point, and the crown (vertex), as demonstrated in the accompanying close-up videos and photographs.
Hair Transplant Recipient Sites
All of our sites are created under loupe magnification for absolute precision. He creates each site to mimic the natural sweep and flow of how one’s hair grows. In addition, he is able to avoid injury to one’s existing hairs without compromising his tightly interlocked and well-angled site distribution. In the face of existing hairs, some surgeons shave the head (which is unnecessary and unreasonable) or transect (cut) the hairs so that one’s existing hairs are lost. Other surgeons skip around and place a few grafts here and there in an uneven distribution which will become obvious with ongoing recession of one’s existing, non-transplanted hairs. We takes care not to harm one’s existing hairs but plans forward for ongoing recession by creating a tight wall of grafted hair that should look good despite recession of one’s non-transplanted hairs in the areas of transplanted hair.
With loupe magnification, we can carefully and precisely follow the angle of how each hair grows and mimic it precisely. This not only permits a natural looking result but also preserves one’s existing hair since the instrument always parallels the existing hairs and would not be liable to transect or injure existing hairs.
Understanding how to maximize the aesthetic impact of a hair transplant is predicated on two principles “the central forelock” and “the cascade effect”. The central forelock, which occupies a circular area immediately behind the hairline, is a zone of critical importance. The hair density that other people perceive from any frontal angle (straight on and from either side) is proportionately related to the density and site angles of the central forelock. we pay particular attention to the effect that the central forelock creates. The cascade effect relates to how hair falls on the scalp based on where the hair is parted or how the whorl of the crown falls so that hair can be optimally distributed to create the appearance of maximal density. For example, if one parts the hair from a split on the left side of the head, then additional density of grafts should be placed at the part to cover the part and to permit greater travel distance of those grafts away from the part toward the other side of the head.
Finally, our precision instruments only pass deep enough into the scalp to receive each graft, which is meticulously verified through every stage of site creation, i.e., proper graft to site fit for each definable set of sites based on width and depth. He uses a specially prepared recipient tumescent solution to lift the scalp away from the deeper tissues to protect the blood supply of the scalp and thereby expedite healing and improve graft yield. At other institutions, patients have remarked on a rapid and incessant tapping noise during hair restoration followed after the procedure with a difficult and bloated recovery time. This outcome is directly related to the surgeon’s failure to protect the underlying scalp during recipient-site creation. This is not a minor issue. we takes pride in every site he creates for every patient every time.
In order to understand how recipient sites should mimic natural hair patterns, all you have to do is examine an individual with very closely shorn hair and study the pattern of how hair grows naturally on each part of the scalp