Dr. Cole to bring CIT Hair Transplant to Asia

Recently, Dr. John Cole met with surgeons in China.  The meeting was scheduled in preparation of establishing a hair transplant center that offers economical CIT hair transplant method.  The center will be headed by a team of hair transplant surgeons led and trained by Dr. Cole.  At this time, several of the doctors have completed 6 months of on-the-job, one-on-one training.

Dr. Cole has already setup a clinic that offers CIT (Cole Isolation Technique) in Korea.  The purpose of offering CIT in Asia is to educate other hair transplant doctors to produce excellent results with the minimally invasive procedure.  Our operation in Korea is a part of our efforts to provide quality hair transplant surgery to all individuals in Asia.  The most recent technology in CIT hair transplant surgery is created at the main office located in Atlanta, Georgia. The Cole Hair Transplant Group offices all have the same common goal of satisfying each patient and making their visit a wonderful experience.

For additional information on low-cost CIT in Korea & China, contact The Cole group: Contact Form.  The Cole Hair Transplant Group offers free in-person consultations with Dr. Cole.  The Cole Hair Transplant Group o

Cole Brings CIT Hair Restoration to korea China

ffers 18+ years of hair transplant experience and provides high-quality hair transplant procedures.  It also specializes in the non-strip scar method of hair transplant and reconstructive hair transplants.

This news originally posted on forhair.com in the following URL:
CIT in Asia news in forhair.com

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Donor Recharging with CIT

I heard the tern “Donor Recharging”, what does it means?

CIT donor recharging is a method of preparation where each extracted scalp follicular unit is replaced with a body hair follicular unit. The exchange of these grafts isn’t always one for one but the purpose of CIT donor recharging is to replete the donor area and help the donor area from being too thinned from harvesting with hair transplant. CIT donor recharging also stimulates the production of melanin, a pigment in the donor area. Donor recharging allows patients with higher degrees of hair loss to maximize their scalp hair donor supply and fill-in the absence of extracted follicular units. The results with donor recharging are subject to the same limitations as BHT and results cannot be guaranteed. CIT donor recharging results vary from patient to patient and the appearance of the results is unpredictable.

Resources:

Click here to read more about donor recharging

Rechargeable donor area ?

Donor After 6,000g Harvested with donor Recharging

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Hair Restoration Transection Rate

Are many hairs transected as the surgeon makes extractions on the donor during hair transplantation?

Good question. The answer is that it varies wildly from surgeon to surgeon and clinic to clinic. We take great pride in having achieved some of the lowest transection rates in the hair transplant world.

Our transection rates with CIT are averaging less than 3% which is very low compared to the industry as a whole. Some published papers on FUE and other single graft harvesting techniques cite transection rates as high as 50 to 70% from their own clinics! This is a travesty, and should be mentioned only to be condemned. .

Single blade strip surgery has average initial transection rates (in our hands) of about 2%; again, it is all over the map depending upon the experience and expertise of the surgeon, and at least for strip, upon the experience and expertise of the surgical staff. One of the most important variables is the surgical technician staff; after the strip is harvested, the tissue is processed by these technicians. Their transection rates can range from 5% up to as much as 50% of the grafts, and is dependent on their training and skill. This is why quality control in a hair transplant practice is so very important (but unfortunately is not the norm by any means). In our practice, CIT has a lower transection rate <3% than strip; in strip cases, our technicians’ transection rates, plus the transection during harvest, averages 5%. So for us, even this relatively low strip transection exceeds our even lower CIT transection!
Remember that the training and expertise of hair transplant surgeons runs the gamut, from beginners with virtually no experience to speak of, to veterans with thousands of cases and thousands of quality results under their belts. However, there is one other factor that comes into play, which is standards. A physician may have years of experience, but set the standards in his practice very low. In this situation, sloppy work and poor technique, combined with minimal staff oversight and quality control, may produce high transection rates and other conditions that lead to mediocre results at best, and cosmetic disasters at worst.

We are proud of the high quality and dedication to excellence that we are known for!

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Beard Hair Removal Through Hair Transplant

Can beard hair be removed through hair transplantation?

There are two ways to remove hair from the donor area. One is by strip method. The other is by removal of individual follicular units. The strip method is not acceptable because it will leave a permanent linear scar. Individual follicular unit removal is acceptable and does work. In fact we often employ this for transplant of beard hair to the scalp. We also use this method to remove unwanted facial hair. This can occur with some forms of face lifting where the hair from the beard is relocated behind the ear. This can be a very difficult and unnatural place to get a razor to shave the beard. We have also used this method to relocate eyebrow hair from a location well above the eyebrow and re-implant the hair into the thinner medial aspect of the eyebrow to create a natural eyebrow transplant.

You should first consider laser hair removal for unwanted facial hair. This may require more than one procedure to remove all the hair. Laser hair removal is only indicated when you have pigmented hair. If there is no pigment in the hair or the hair has turned “grey”, you laser hair removal will not work. Removal of facial hair by CIT or FIT may require more than one pass, as well, to remove all the hair.

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Hair Transplant Surgery-Importance of Hair Characteristics

What is the importance of hair characteristics in hair transplant surgery?

These characteristics are significant in that they determine to a great degree how much coverage of the scalp there is, in order to block light. When light is not blocked and penetrates through to the scalp, the appearance is of thinning or balding.

The other big factor here is the density, which is another topic unto itself. The density is the number of hairs or follicular units per unit area (square centimeters or square inches or whatever unit you prefer; the centimeter is the standard for physicians). Although this density usually gets most of the attention when discussing hair loss, hair characteristics are equally, if not more, important.

First let’s look at color. At first, one might think that the darker the hair, the better the coverage. This is generally not correct. Lighter hair usually goes with lighter skin, and the tow together tend to mask thinning very well. Darker hair can cover well, but in the case of poor hair transplant work (pluggy looking, or larger graft on frontal hairline) they may stand out much worse than lighter hair. We will discuss color in more detail when we discuss contrast.

Curl is another very important factor in coverage. Generally speaking, curly hair provides coverage in proportion to the degree of curl (i.e., wavy hair gives better coverage than straight hair, curly hair better than wavy, very curly better than slightly curly, etc.). This has to do with light blockage as well. The curlier the hair is, the more it creates a meshwork of sorts (kind of like a thatched roof) which “stands up” a little bit off the scalp and keeps the light from penetrating to the scalp.

Contrast has to do with the difference between hair color and skin color. The closer to each other the hair and scalp are, the better the coverage. In a way, this “fools” the eye of the observer into not noticing the decrease in density. If a person with blonde hair and light skin loses 50% or his or her density, they may appear much less affected than a person with equally light skin and jet black hair. In this case the dark hairs of the second example are highlighted against the light skin and it shows the sparseness of the hair. The person with the blonde hair reveals very little difference between the hair and scalp, in other words, the observer cannot detect where the hair leaves off and the scalp begins.

Last, let’s consider caliber. Thicker strands of hair provide more “hair mass”, which is a term doctors use to describe the total effect of length times caliber. The more hair mass in a given area, the better the coverage. This makes intuitive sense. Imagine covering a hut with logs. If you place 20 logs as a roof, which will give better coverage, skinny logs or big round ones with large diameters? Of course, the bigger ones, so the thicker hairs do the same over the scalp. And remember, what appears as thinning or balding is simply the appearance of light shining through to the scalp.

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