I just had Hair Transplant, I'm In my 4th day now. while sleeping I think my hand rubbed some of the implanted grafts I see a small area don't have new grafts but there is no marks of scratching or bleeding. am I imagining things, or this can happen ?
Answer: 4 days post op Hello, After the operation the first 7 days is very important. If you didn’t see any blood that is a good sign. in most cases the transplanted hair sheds until the 2nd month. If you experience shedding do not be afraid.
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Answer: 4 days post op Hello, After the operation the first 7 days is very important. If you didn’t see any blood that is a good sign. in most cases the transplanted hair sheds until the 2nd month. If you experience shedding do not be afraid.
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Answer: It is best to contact your doctor about post operative care and instructions since each doctor has a different regimen. It is best to contact your doctor about post operative care and instructions since each doctor has a different regimen. If your dislodged a graft you may notice bleeding.
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Answer: It is best to contact your doctor about post operative care and instructions since each doctor has a different regimen. It is best to contact your doctor about post operative care and instructions since each doctor has a different regimen. If your dislodged a graft you may notice bleeding.
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March 12, 2018
Answer: Rubbing the new grafts during sleeping If you have no bleeding , you did not harm the grfats . Transplanted graft’s hair starts to shedding in the first week of surgery and may go on untill 4-6 th weeks after surgery. İt is not surprising to lost approx. %70-80 of all transplanted hair shafts in first month when you are washing, gently rubbing or touching the head. İt is shock loss and not permanent.
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March 12, 2018
Answer: Rubbing the new grafts during sleeping If you have no bleeding , you did not harm the grfats . Transplanted graft’s hair starts to shedding in the first week of surgery and may go on untill 4-6 th weeks after surgery. İt is not surprising to lost approx. %70-80 of all transplanted hair shafts in first month when you are washing, gently rubbing or touching the head. İt is shock loss and not permanent.
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March 15, 2018
Answer: Terrible crusting You have persistent crusting which should have come off from good washing techniques after the surgery, An FUE is treated just like a regular hair transplant with regard to the recipient area, but the donor area has open wounds which require daily washing with soap and water. An FUE is treated just like a regular hair transplant with regard to the recipient area, but the donor area has open wounds which require daily washing with soap and water. Within 3 days of surgery, you can resume full activities, heavy exercises if you wish. The recipient area requires daily washes as well to keep the recipient area free of crusts. I generally recommend the use of a sponge and supply my patient with a surgical sponge to fill with soapy water and press on the recipient area daily. By repeating this daily, all crusts can be washed off without any fear of losing grafts. IF any crust is present, use a Q tip and dip it into soapy water, and roll it on the crusts and that will lift them off without dislodging them, but never rub them, just roll the Q tip on the recipient crust. I like to see no evidence of any crusting in the recipient area and the crusts from the donor area gone in 3-4 days with daily washing. To get the crusting off, you need to leave the shampoo on your hair for 10 minutes and as the crust become water logged,then will come off with gentle finger action. Repeat this twice a day until it is all gone. An FUE is treated just like a regular hair transplant with regard to the recipient area, but the donor area has open wounds which require daily washing with soap and water. Within 3 days of surgery, you can resume full activities, heavy exercises if you wish. The recipient area requires daily washes as well to keep the recipient area free of crusts. I generally recommend the use of a sponge and supply my patient with a surgical sponge to fill with soapy water and press on the recipient area daily. By repeating this daily, all crusts can be washed off without any fear of losing grafts. IF any crust is present, use a Q tip and dip it into soapy water, and roll it on the crusts and that will lift them off without dislodging them, but never rub them, just roll the Q tip on the recipient crust. I like to see no evidence of any crusting from the day of the surgery through the entire post operative period.
Helpful
March 15, 2018
Answer: Terrible crusting You have persistent crusting which should have come off from good washing techniques after the surgery, An FUE is treated just like a regular hair transplant with regard to the recipient area, but the donor area has open wounds which require daily washing with soap and water. An FUE is treated just like a regular hair transplant with regard to the recipient area, but the donor area has open wounds which require daily washing with soap and water. Within 3 days of surgery, you can resume full activities, heavy exercises if you wish. The recipient area requires daily washes as well to keep the recipient area free of crusts. I generally recommend the use of a sponge and supply my patient with a surgical sponge to fill with soapy water and press on the recipient area daily. By repeating this daily, all crusts can be washed off without any fear of losing grafts. IF any crust is present, use a Q tip and dip it into soapy water, and roll it on the crusts and that will lift them off without dislodging them, but never rub them, just roll the Q tip on the recipient crust. I like to see no evidence of any crusting in the recipient area and the crusts from the donor area gone in 3-4 days with daily washing. To get the crusting off, you need to leave the shampoo on your hair for 10 minutes and as the crust become water logged,then will come off with gentle finger action. Repeat this twice a day until it is all gone. An FUE is treated just like a regular hair transplant with regard to the recipient area, but the donor area has open wounds which require daily washing with soap and water. Within 3 days of surgery, you can resume full activities, heavy exercises if you wish. The recipient area requires daily washes as well to keep the recipient area free of crusts. I generally recommend the use of a sponge and supply my patient with a surgical sponge to fill with soapy water and press on the recipient area daily. By repeating this daily, all crusts can be washed off without any fear of losing grafts. IF any crust is present, use a Q tip and dip it into soapy water, and roll it on the crusts and that will lift them off without dislodging them, but never rub them, just roll the Q tip on the recipient crust. I like to see no evidence of any crusting from the day of the surgery through the entire post operative period.
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