u/CS_1005

Image 1 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 2 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 3 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 4 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 5 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 6 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 7 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 8 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
Image 9 — Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)
▲ 73 r/HairlossProgressPics+1 crossposts

Results after 1 year of treatment (21 M)

Also check my other posts for the months inbetween.

Current Regime: 0,5 mg Dutasterid, 5 mg Oral Minoxidil, 5 % Topical Minoxidil (twice a day)

u/CS_1005 — 10 days ago

Would a HT be possible after 1,5 years of Medical Treatment and could the native hairs be damage?

I have been on Treatment for over a year now. Right now I am using 0,5 Dut daily and also Oral and Topical Min which I think still results to a little bit of regrowth, at least no further loss. (I am willing to take the meds for live)

Current Age: 21,5 Years

This is a Message I got from a HT Clinic. Is it true that I could lose my native hairs? I was thinking about doing FUT to save doners for further transplants If needed and using only a maximum of 2500-3000 Grafts

Hello,

Dr. Hakan has reviewed your photos and does not think that a hair transplant would be the right decision at this stage. He believes your frontal hairline shape and position are already appropriate, and there is not enough recession to justify any intervention in that area.

In the top and crown regions, the thinning pattern appears to be what we call diffuse thinning. In such cases, transplantation often does not yield efficient results. Additionally, the trauma from the procedure could potentially damage the existing native hairs and make the situation worse than before. For these reasons, he does not consider those areas suitable for transplantation at this time.

Hair transplantation can be reconsidered in the future if the hair loss progresses. Preserving your donor resources—rather than using them in areas where we may not achieve results or could even cause harm—would be a much wiser strategy.

I think I only have MPB so I find the statement with diffuse thinning a bit wierd.

u/CS_1005 — 11 days ago