Are Women Good Candidates For Hair Transplant Surgery?

| Thursday, June 9, 2011
By Owen Jones


Most people associate balding with men and that is not surprising as most western men do go bald sooner or later. Most men really hate going bald. Some take to brushing their hair in a different way, having it cut short or even shaved off completely or they wear a hat. Increasingly, men are seeing balding as a natural process over which they have no control and just get on with their lives. This is a step in the correct direction.

However, women go bald too, or at least it is possible that they can do. Traditionally western women worry more about their appearance than their men folk do and so women can take it very badly when or if they begin losing their hair. Some women take to wearing a wig and others try a hair transplant.

The difficulty is that men and women lose their hair for different reasons and hair transplants favour the causes of men's baldness rather than women's.

Distinctive male baldness is called 'male pattern baldness' and everybody knows men whom it has affected. It means that men lose hair first at the front, a receding hairline, and then on the top; leaving a band of hair running around three sides of the head. The three lower sides in fact have healthy, growing, self-replicating follicles.

It is this hair that is used if a man goes for a hair transplant - healthy hair and it has to do with testosterone, the male hormone, as oestrogen is the female hormone.

Female baldness tends to affect the whole of the head at the same time, which means that there is not a crop of healthy hair follicles from which to transplant hair to other regions of the head. This makes most women inappropriate clients for a hair transplant.

Luckily for women up to about retirement age, baldness merely affects a small percentage of them unless it is through illness or the treatment of an illness. On the other hand, just about 5% of women are decent candidates for a hair transplant. Women who have lost their hair due to using rollers for a long period of time, usually have a couple of patches of good hair left that can be utilized for transplanting.

Other women who have a good chance of a successful hair transplant are those who have a form of male pattern baldness and those who have lost hair due to trauma surrounding regions of surgery. Those who have lost their hair due to chemotherapy, will often make a full or near full recovery after the chemo sessions are complete.

The easiest option for older women is to wear a wig. It is not perfect, naturally, but it does restore some confidence to those who could not otherwise go out without hair. Other options are hats, scarves and turbans, jus like many women wore in the Twenties and Thirties.




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