Hair today ...
Andrew Edwards
Admit it, image can be a big part of life. In a world where first
impressions can be formed before you say a word, is it any surprise
that thousands of people seek help from doctors to better their
appearance?
A large chunk of the American population faces the prospect of
losing their hair -- male pattern baldness affects 35-million men in
the United States, according to the International Society of Hair
Restoration Surgery. However, thinning hair is not exclusively a
men’s problem, female pattern baldness and other sources of hair loss
can affect women as well.
The American Society of Plastic Surgeons keeps track of the number
of hair replacement surgeries performed in the United States. In
2003, the most recent year available for figures, more than 31,700
patients sought a surgeon’s aid to ameliorate hair loss. The year saw
an increase of about 2,000 patients from 2002.
The increase came after two years of decline from 2000, when more
than 44,000 hair replacement surgeries were performed.
One of the many people who are dealing with hair loss is Costa
Mesa resident Charles Nowlin, a 47-year-old tree broker who underwent
hair restoration surgery about two weeks ago. His decision to go
under the knife was motivated primarily by his desire to have more
confidence about his appearance.
“It’s a self-esteem thing, definitely,” he said.
Though personal reasons like Nowlin’s are a common reason for
patients to seek hair replacement surgery, some have operations to
impress others, hoping a younger appearance will attract a date or an
employer.
Dr. Tony Mangubat, president of the International Society of Hair
Restoration Surgery, acknowledged some patients pursued hair
transplantation because they believe a younger look will make them
more competitive on the job hunt.
“Maybe it’s a preconceived notion that they have. It’s not my job
to tell you whether that’s true or not, but that’s their perception,”
Mangubat said.
The doctor who performed Nowlin’s surgery, Newport Beach surgeon
Dr. Craig Ziering, said that with the exception of people in
entertainment and modeling, he does not know of any patients who have
been advised to seek surgery to strengthen their professional
competitiveness, though the advantages of a full head of hair are no
secret.
“I don’t know that we’ve had anyone that said, ‘My career
counselor said I need a more youthful look,’ but it’s well-known,”
Ziering said. “The person with a better appearance has a leg up
getting a job position. Right or wrong, appearance does matter.”
Nowlin was interviewed in the middle of his operation while three
surgical assistants hovered over him. Nowlin had a close-cropped
haircut and tiny red flecks were visible around the back of his head
where hairs had been removed. His doctor, Ziering, would complete the
procedure by transferring the donor hairs back to him, where they
would be implanted just above his forehead in an effort to even out
his hairline.
The technique, called microscopic follicular unit grafting, is an
advance over the hair plug procedures of the past. In a typical
surgery, Ziering said he and his team perform 3,000 follicle grafts,
which contain 7,000 to 8,000 hairs.
Follicular unit grafting, Ziering said, can provide for a more
natural looking hair pattern than plugs, since less hairs are grafted
at a time. Ziering said he grafts hair in units of one, two or three
follicles, whereas in hair plug surgeries, about 16 hairs would be
implanted at a time.
“[Plugs] look very irregular and unnatural,” Ziering said.
Nowlin had undergone hair replacement surgery about two years ago,
he said, and opted for it a second time to try the grafting
procedure. Another patient who had surgery the same day, a
48-year-old Chatsworth man who gave his name only as Joe, was also
having surgery for a second time.
“It’s just touch up work,” he said. “I’m not going to do this at
65. I’m going to do it at 48 and enjoy it.”
About 30% of Ziering’s patients are people who want to touch up
previous surgeries, especially patients who had hair plugs implanted.
Joe, a water-skier who has worn his black hair long for years, sat
back with a couple “Star Wars” movies on hand during the all-day
surgery.
“It’s not that painful and you get to watch a video and it’s
done,” he said.
What does the procedure feel like?
“I’m awake and everything and I’m all numbed up, but you can hear
him pull it off and cauterize everything,” he said.
Dr. Michael Meshkin of the Cosmetic Hair Replacement Surgery
Institute, which has a clinic in Newport Beach, has been performing
follicular grafts since 1990. Most of his patients, he said, seek
surgery as a means to bolster their self-esteem as well as their
professional and personal lives.
“It’s the psychological effect of hair loss, it affects them
socially, their jobs, dating and all these things,” Meshkin said.
Ziering said his clients are mostly professionals, and that he has
treated both men and women.
“I probably do more doctors and attorneys than anything,” he said.
“I do entertainers, but I also do school teachers, military people
... hair loss doesn’t discriminate.”
The three regions in the country where hair restoration surgeries
are most often performed are Southern California, Florida and New
York, said Patrick Hennessey, a former hair restoration patient and
publisher of HairLossLearningCenter.com and other hair surgery
related websites. The three areas are hotspots for the surgery
primarily because of their large populations -- and the importance
their denizens place on image.
“I think L.A. and Miami, where I’m at, are more appearance
conscious,” Hennessey said in a phone interview.
Ziering agreed.
“Southern California is definitely a hotbed, and I can tell you I
do more surgeries in my Newport Beach office than my Beverly Hills
office,” Ziering said.
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