Emerging Trends in Body Hair Transplantation

The follicular extraction unit (FUE) is becoming increasingly popular for Hair Transplant. As FUE leaves behind any linear scars, it is more appropriate to harvest different body areas including beard, chest, and extremes of individuals with a hemisphere. Body hair characteristics such as thickness, length, and hair cycle may not completely match the hair of the scalp. Removal of body hairs is more time consuming, requiring a higher skill than a regular FUE scalp. Body hair transplant can be successfully used alone or in combination with scalp hair in a high degree of buffer, to improve cosmetic appearance of hairlines and scarring alopecia when donor scpp hair is scarce. Body hairs are opened a new source of viable donors for hair restoration surgeons, especially in high grade Norwood cases five and above of androgenetic alopecia.
Introduction
A hair transplant is a rapidly changing area where hair restoration surgeons are trying to find newer methods to improve the yield of  and to improve the overall aesthetic outcome of the hair restoration procedure. Traditionally, hair transplantation involves the use of follicles from the donor's safe area of ​​the scope and transplantation of these follicles into the barrier areas of the scalp. The safe donor zone has a limited supply of follicles; up to 6000 follicular hair units up to the maximum donor area density. This is not sufficient to provide appropriate coverage, particularly in higher grade VI and VII grades of Norwood in androgenetic alopecia. In such cases, hair follicles from other parts of the body, including beard, chest, arms, and legs in the chair, can be used as an additional donor supply source.
Although follicular unit transplantation (FUT) is a suitable procedure to win the diarrhea, it may be a problem and leave a cosmetic scarring if it is used to remove body hairs. Extraction of follicular units (FUE) on the other hand is much more suitable to remove bodily hairs, which use portfolios to remove the follicular units instead of strip of skin. The circular wound fosters a secondary secret in a few days. In FUE, individual follicular units are made from the donor site (body or scalp) to shear once at a time using circular punches. FUE involves the use of sharp or thematic punches of different diameters between 0.7 and 1.3 mm. It is unlike FUT because a linear donor strip is not leaked, and post-operative healing is faster and less trauma for patients.
History
Woods was the first to successfully achieve FUE grafts using 1-mm circular punches in 1995. Inaba described a similar technique in his textbook in 1996. In 2002, Rassman and Bernstein introduced the combine the 'Follicular Unit Extraction' method (FUE) to describe this procedure.
While body hair transplantation with FUE is being used in hair restoration but recently, Okuda in 1939 first described it in a main body transplant plantation where hairs were used from scalp, brow, axillary, and pubic areas. Restoration of hairs in cicatricial and congenital alopecia and public areas.  In 2001, the first successful hair transplant was recorded with the use of 18-modified hypodermic needles to remove small amounts of beard hair by cutting individual bulbs to sub-dermal level.
Indicators for body hair or non-scalp hair for hair transplantation. Individuals whose terminal hairs display more than a beard, chest, legs, arms and other parts of the body High grades of androgenetic alopecia, e.g., Norwood grades 6 or 7, where donor scalp hair is not sufficient to provide full or adequate coverage. Hair of the available scalp donor is exhausted due to previously refurbished surgeries, without adequate coverage of existing blunt areas that require more follicular units as a result of aesthetic restoration. By combining scalp donor hair to improve the density of the recipient area to improve the final cosmetic result. To make camouflage or seal low density, a safe area of ​​post-FUE donor safe to be removed in the scalp, with scarce linear camouflage digestion in the donor area.
Body hair can be used to alleviate the hair and to restore the area in a timely manner. Lack of adequate donor scalp hair in cases of cicatricial alopecia where the scarring process is so extensive that donor hair lack from scalp to provide adequate cover in scarring patches.
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