Letâs Give Kudos to Hair Transplant Physicianâs Regularly Presenting Results on our Hair Loss Forum
Comments: 0 - Date: November 28th, 2008 - Categories: Uncategorized
In the past, prospective patients considering hair transplants had limited online information about clinics they were considering. But recently, weve been successful in getting almost all surgeons recommended on the Hair Transplant Network to present examples of their work on our forum. See Recommended Clinics Required to Present their Patient Results on our Forum.
What a great opportunity for prospective patients to see real results from a larger variety of hair restoration clinics they are considering. To see a number of patient examples from a number of leading clinics throughout the world, visit Patient Results Posted by Leading Hair Transplant Clinics.
You are encouraged to check this section regularly and give genuine feedback to the doctors regularly presenting examples of their work. Remember that your regular feedback of a surgeon’s results contributes to advancing the hair replacement industry and improving techniques.
Kudos to hair transplant surgeons recommended by this community for rising to the challenge by going public with their results.
Bill Seemiller - aka Falceros
Associate Publisher of the Hair Transplant Network and the Hair Loss Learning Center
View my Hair Loss Weblog

You didn’t mention your age. As Bill (Falceros) had mentioned on our hair loss forum, it is normal to lose 50-100 hairs a day simply from the random rotation of the hairs on your head through the hair growth and resting cycles. So on any given day, you will have that many hairs falling out and that many hairs starting up growing out from the follicle again. The number you mention, assuming you’ve proved this by counting them - that’s a hard thing to “eyeball” - and you are losing that many, then one of two things is going on. Either you are really in an accelerated phase of male pattern baldness, or you have experienced a “telogen” reaction from one of many causes. These phases are very common and usually occur around a few weeks to a couple of months AFTER the incident or exposure that actually caused it, which makes it a little harder to figure out.