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Overview. Embryology and Anatomy of HairAndrogenetic AlopeciaHair Growth CyclePathophysiology of Hair LossPatient EvaluationMedical TreatmentSurgical TreatmentHistoricalFollicular Unit Transplantation. Embryology and Anatomy of Hair. Embryology of Hair Follicle. Begin development between 9 and 12 weeks gestational ageHair production typically seen between 16 and 20 weeks gestational age.
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1. Management of Androgenetic Alopecia Garrett Hauptman MD
David Teller MD
University of Texas Medical Branch
Department of Otolaryngology
December 7, 2005
2. Overview Embryology and Anatomy of Hair
Androgenetic Alopecia
Hair Growth Cycle
Pathophysiology of Hair Loss
Patient Evaluation
Medical Treatment
Surgical Treatment
Historical
Follicular Unit Transplantation
3. Embryology and Anatomy of Hair
4. Embryology of Hair Follicle Begin development between 9 and 12 weeks gestational age
Hair production typically seen between 16 and 20 weeks gestational age
5. Embryology of Hair Follicle Derived from ectoderm and mesoderm
Ectoderm
Hair matrix cells
Melanocytes
Mesoderm
Erector pili
Dermal papilla
Follicular sheath
Blood vessels
6. Anatomy of Hair Shaft Surrounded by an outer and inner sheath
Shaft composed of 3 layers
Cuticle: outer layer
Cortex: middle layer
Medulla: inner layer
7. Follicular Unit Terminal hairs: 1-4
Vellus hairs: 1-2
Sebaceous glands: 9
Erector pili muscle: 9
Perifollicular vascular plexus
Neural net
Connective tissue
8. SCALP Layers Skin
Connective tissue (subcutaneous tissue)
Aponeurotica (galea aponeurotica)
Loose connective tissue
Pericranium
9. Blood Supply and Innervation Frontal
Supratrochlear
Supraorbital
Temporal
Superficial temporal
Zygomaticotemporal
Parietal
Retroauricular
Auriculotemporal, Great auricular, Lesser occipital
Occipital
Occipital
Greater occipital
10. Alopecia
11. Alopecia Definition:
Origin: Gr. Alepekia = a disease in which the hair falls out
Loss of hair, wool, or feathers
Absence of hair from skin areas where it is normally present
12. Types of Alopecia Alopecia adnata
Alopecia areata
Alopecia cicatrisata
Alopecia conginitalis
Alopecia disseminata
Alopecia leprotica
Alopecia marginalis
Alopecia medicamentosa
Alopecia mucinosa
Alopecia pityrodes Alopecia presinilis
Alopecia senilis
Alopecia symptomatica
Alopecia syphilitica
Alopecia totalis
Alopecia toxica
Alopecia triangularis
Alopecia triangularis congenitalis
Alopecia universalis
13. Androgenetic Alopecia Definition
Hereditary thinning of the hair induced by androgens in genetically susceptible men and women
Also known as
Male-pattern hair loss or common baldness in men
Female-pattern hair loss in women
14. Androgenetic Alopecia Thinning of hair usually begins between 12 and 40 years old in males and females
Approximately half the population expresses this trait to some degree before age 50
Inheritance is polygenic
15. Hair Growth Cycle
16. Hair Growth Cycle Stages
Anagen = growth
Catagen = involution
Telogen = rest
17. Hair Growth Cycle Normal scalp activity
Anagen = 90-95%
Catagen = <1%
Telogen = 5-10%
At the end of telogen, hair is released and the next cycle is initiated
Up to 100 hairs in telogen are shed each day and about the same number of follicles enter anagen
18. Hair Growth Cycle
19. Pathophysiology of Hair Loss
20. Pathophysiology of Hair Loss Dihydrotestosterone
Formed by peripheral conversion of testosterone by 5-alpha reductase
Binds to androgen receptor on susceptible hair follicles
Hormone-receptor complex activates genes responsible for gradual transformation of large terminal follicles to miniaturized follicles
21. Pathophysiology of Hair Loss: Miniaturization
22. Pathophysiology of Hair Loss: Miniaturization Progressive diminution of hair shaft diameter and length in response to systemic androgens
23. Patient Evaluation
24. Patient Evaluation Androgenetic alopecia diagnosis
Characteristic pattern of hair loss
Miniaturization in thinning areas
Family history is supportive but not necessary
25. Patient Evaluation Evaluate for miniaturization using a densitometer to observe small area of clipped scalp
26. Patient Evaluation Normal scalp
Thick terminal hair
Fine vellus hair Miniaturization
Thick terminal hair
Fine vellus hair
Intermediate diameter hair
27. Patient Evaluation Regions of the scalp
28. Patient Evaluation Norwood Classification
Most widely used classification of male-pattern hair loss
2 types
Common type
Type A variant
29. Patient Evaluation
30. Patient Evaluation
31. Patient Evaluation
32. Patient Evaluation
33. Patient Evaluation Studies reveal negative psychosocial impact with hair loss
Body image dissatisfaction
Negative stereotype:
Older
Weaker
Less attractive
Counsel patients on expectations with treatment
34. Medical Treatment
35. Medical Treatment Goals
Increase coverage of the scalp
Retard further hair thinning
Drugs
Minoxidil: unknown mechanism for hair growth stimulation
Finasteride: competitive inhibitor of type 2 5-alpha reductase
Dutasteride: competitive inhibitor of type 1 and 2 5-alpha reductase
36. Medical Treatment Effect of Minoxidil applied topically at 2% and 5% concentrations BID (NEJM 1999- VH Price)
37. Medical Treatment Effect of Finasteride given at 1mg PO QD (NEJM 1999- VH Price)
38. Medical Treatment Effect of Dutasteride given at 0.5mg PO QD in 1 patient (J Drugs Derm 2005- M Olszewska et al)
39. Surgical Techniques Goal
Achieve the greatest hair density while retaining complete undetectability and natural appearance
40. Surgical Techniques Scalp Reduction
Scalp Flaps
Hair Transplantation
41. Scalp Reduction Originally described in 1978 by Unger and Unger
Excise non-hair-bearing scalp in excision pattern suitable for patient
Saggital midline ellipse
“Y” pattern
Lateral patterns (“S”, “J”, and “C”)
“U” pattern
Miscellaneous patterns (“T”, “I”, transverse ellipse, crescent ellipse)
42. Scalp Reduction Bald scalp excised to pericranium, but not through pericranium
Wide undermining with primary closure
43. Scalp Reduction
44. Scalp Reduction
45. Scalp Reduction Complications
Excessive scalp excision
Tension on wound closure
Possible tissue necrosis
Scar widening
“Stretch-Back”
Tendency of bald scalp to expand after each reduction
Between 10-50% of total reduction
Majority occurs within 2 months of surgery
46. Scalp Reduction Techniques Opposing “Stretch-Back”
Scalp Extenders
Silastic with hooks attached to deep galeal surface with hooks parallel to incision
Anchoring Galeal Flaps
Rectangular galea strips on one side of incision sutured to undersurface of opposing flap
Nordstrom Suture
Elastic silicone polymer suture attached to galea
47. Scalp Flaps Advancement or rotation of hair-bearing scalp
Provides immediate coverage of alopecic areas
Types
Lateral Scalp Flap
Temporoparietooccipital Flap (Juri Flap or Fleming-Mayer Flap)
Preauricular Flap
Free Scalp Flaps
48. Scalp Flaps Complications
Elevation of hairline associated with donor region
Possibility of flap necrosis and donor area necrosis
Unnatural appearance of hair growth direction
49. Tissue Expanders Increases surface area of hair-bearing scalp
Placed between galea and pericranium
Used in conjunction with Scalp Reduction and Scalp Flaps
50. Tissue Expanders
51. Follicular Unit Transplantation Patient Preparation
Anesthesia
Graft Harvesting
Graft Dissection
Recipient Sites
Post-op Care
52. Follicular Unit Transplantation Technique pioneered by Dr. Bobby Limmer
Graft Dissection Technique
Separate follicular units from surrounding tissue
Want small grafts with minimal epithelium to allow for
Smallest recipient site necessary
Limits skin trauma and preserves blood supply
Avoid disrupting unit structures
53. Follicular Unit Transplantation Follicular graft units have between 1 and 4 hair follicles
54. Follicular Unit Transplantation Patient preparation
Upright position
Trim donor area to 1-2mm with electric clippers
From occipital protuberance medially to over ears laterally
55. Follicular Unit Transplantation Oral sedation may be used
Local anesthesia
Mixture of 60% lidocaine 0.5% and 40% bupivacaine 0.025% with 1:200,000 epinephrine and sodium bicarbonate 8.4%, 1:20
Lidocaine for quick onset
Bupivacaine for increased duration
Epinephrine for hemostasis and increased duration
Sodium bicarbonate to decrease stinging
56. Follicular Unit Transplantation Donor area anesthesia
Inject into deep subcutaneous fat layer
Extend injection 1cm inferiorly and several cm lateral of graft margins
Recipient area anesthesia
Inject into superficial dermis and subcutaneous space
57. Follicular Unit Transplantation After initial injections, tumescent anesthesia administered to midfat
Lidocaine 0.17% and epinephrine 1:600,000
Purpose
Increases follicular distance from nerves and blood vessels
Increases ridgidity of donor area
Decreases bleeding
More uniform anesthesia
Reduce total amount of anesthesia required
58. Follicular Unit Transplantation Graft harvesting
Follicular Unit Extraction
Involves individual unit harvesting by making using a punch
Good for minimal hair loss
Does not leave linear scar if people wear hair short
Only 2-3 people can work at once
Donor Strip Harvest
Currently used method
59. Follicular Unit Transplantation Donor Strip Harvest
1cm wide graft is harvested from posterior middle scalp at the external occipital protuberance- “the permanent zone”
Want to be above muscular insertion
Do not want to harvest from a potential area of future hair loss
60. Follicular Unit Transplantation Donor Strip Harvest
Best performed with Rassman handle loaded with two 10 blades set 1.2cm apart
Handle holds blades angled at 30 degrees to minimize follicular transection
May be performed freehand with 10 blade
Pro: allows blade angle to be adjusted
Con: difficult to keep width uniform
61. Follicular Unit Transplantation
62. Follicular Unit Transplantation Donor strip elevated in subcutaneous plane
63. Follicular Unit Transplantation Strip ends are tapered to 1.5 strip width for closure purposes
Preferred closure method with 5-0 absorbable suture
Running skin stitch
1.5mm from wound edge
Advance approximately 5mm
Minimizes entrapment and destruction of follicles
64. Follicular Unit Transplantation
65. Follicular Unit Transplantation Staples also can be used for closure
Pro:
No tissue reactivity
Cons:
Difficult wound apposition
Uncomfortable for patient
May result in stretched scar
66. Follicular Unit Transplantation
67. Follicular Unit Transplantation One square cm of donor tissue yields approximately 100 follicular units
68. Follicular Unit Transplantation Graft Dissection
Stereomicroscope
Divide donor strip into thin sections- “slivering”
Avoid follicle transection
Avoid dividing follicular units
69. Follicular Unit Transplantation
70. Follicular Unit Transplantation
71. Follicular Unit Transplantation Slivers are then dissected into individual follicular units
72. Follicular Unit Transplantation
73. Follicular Unit Transplantation Follicular units are sorted based on hair number into petri dishes of Ringer’s lactate or saline on ice
74. Follicular Unit Transplantation Recipient Sites
Do not use instrument that will remove tissue
Keep recipient sites small, but large enough so that grafts do not need to be forced in place
Visible scars are not produced by needles 18 gauge or less
75. Follicular Unit Transplantation Recipient Sites
Instrument size guide equivalents
20 gauge = 1-hair unit
19 gauge = 2-hair and thin 3-hair units
18 gauge = 3-hair and 4-hair units
76. Follicular Unit Transplantation Recipient Sites
Techniques
Stick and Plant
Grafts are placed immediately after creation of recipient site
“Premaking” recipient sites
All recipient sites created prior to grafting
77. Follicular Unit Transplantation Stick and Plant Technique
Pros
Needle can be used to facilitate graft placement
Sites do not go unfilled
Avoids placing 2 grafts in one site
Cons
Increased risk of dislodging (“popping”) adjacent graft when creating site
Must focus on design elements (angling and distribution) while performing technical aspect
78. Follicular Unit Transplantation “Premaking” Recipient Sites
Pros
Physician concentrates on design without distraction of graft handling or risk of popping
Allows time for coagulation improving visibility and placement
Cons
Must estimate graft number
Unfilled recipient sites
2 grafts in one site (“piggybacking”)
79. Follicular Unit Transplantation Hair direction
Grafts placed at original growing angle, not direction of hair grooming
Hair anterior to vertex transition point should point forward
Angle becomes more acute as it reaches the anterior hairline
80. Follicular Unit Transplantation
81. Follicular Unit Transplantation Recipient Site Density
Average non-balding scalp has 100 follicular units per square cm
50% of hair may be lost before noticeable thinning
Wasteful for more than 50% to be replaced
Up to 25 follicular units per square cm into frontal area of balding scalp is recommended
82. Follicular Unit Transplantation Recipient Site Distribution
Creating greatest density in front part of scalp produces best cosmetic result (“Forward Weighting”)
Recipient sites placed closer together
Larger follicular units placed (3-4 hairs)
Recipient site density should be gradually tapered toward the crown
83. Follicular Unit Transplantation “Forward Weighting”
84. Follicular Unit Transplantation
85. Follicular Unit Transplantation
86. Follicular Unit Transplantation
87. Follicular Unit Transplantation
88. Follicular Unit Transplantation
89. Follicular Unit Transplantation Operative time typically 3 to 6 hours
90. Follicular Unit Transplantation Postoperative Care
Wash scalp with sterile water
Avoid using peroxide
Apply antibiotic ointment and pressure headband dressing to donor site
Cover transplanted area with surgeon’s cap
91. Follicular Unit Transplantation Postoperative Care
Patient to have hair washed on post-op day 1 to remove crusts
Some surgeon’s have patient return to clinic for this, some permit patient to wash hair
Return to clinic in 1 week
No strenuous activity for one week
Pain medication
Photoprotection for 3 months
92. Follicular Unit Transplantation
93. Follicular Unit Transplantation
94. Follicular Unit Transplantation
95. Follicular Unit Transplantation Problems and Complications
Poor patient selection
Operating on young patients is difficult
Hairline creation looks unnatural long term
Do not know donor site stability
Poor aesthetic judgment
Grafts in wrong direction
Crown transplant in young patient who is just starting to lose hair
Improper graft handling
Wide donor scars
96. Follicular Unit Transplantation More than one procedure is often necessary
Wait at least 6 to 8 months between procedures
97. Conclusions Evaluate and counsel patient
Consider medical management
Follicular Unit Transplantation is surgical technique of choice today
98. Baldness Portrays Being Older and Wiser
99. Bald Can Be Funny
100. Bald is Beautiful
101. Or Is It?
102. Bibliography Portions of this paper and presentation were taken directly form the May 29, 2002 Grand Rounds presentation by Elizabeth Rosen and Karen Calhoun entitled Management of Alopecia.
Bernstein, RM, et al. Follicular Unit Transplantation: 2005. Dermatology Clinics 2005 , 23; 393-414.
Harris, JA. Follicular Unit Transplantation: Dissecting and Planting Techniques. Facial Plastic Surgery Clinics of North America 2004, 12; 225-232.
Epstein, JS. Follicular-Unit Hair Grafting. Archives of Facial Plastic Surgery 2003, 5; 439-444.
Price, VH. Treatment of Hair Loss. New England Journal of Medicine, September 23, 1999; 341 (13); 964-973.
Olszewska, M, et al. Effective Treatment of Female Androgenic Alopecia with Dutasteride. Journal of Drugs in Dermatology 2005, 4;637.
Nordstrom, RE. Scalp, Hair, Baldness, and Surgery. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 173-177.
Barrera, A. Hair Transplantation, The Art of Micrografting and Minigrafting. Quality Medical Publishing, Inc, St.Louis; 2002.
Abell, E. Embryology and Anatomy of the Hair Follicle. In, Disorders of Hair Growth, Diagnosis and Treatment, E.A.Olsen, ed. McGraw-Hill, Inc, New York; 1994.
Sinclair, R. Male Pattern Androgenetic Alopecia. British Medical Journal. 1998, 317; 865-869.
Ramos-e-Silva, M. Male Pattern Hair Loss: Prevention Rather Than Regrowth. International Journal of Dermatology. Oct 2000, 39 (10); 728-731.
Nordstrom, RE. The Initial Interview. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 179-187.
Devine, JW, Howard, PS. Classification of Donor Hair in Male Pattern Baldness and Operations for Each Type. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 189-191.
Price, VH. Drug Therapy: Treatment of Hair Loss. The New England Journal of Medicine. Sept 23 1999, 341 (13); 964-973.
Unger, MG. Scalp Reductions. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 253-258.
Raposio, E, Nordstrom, RE. Tension and Flap Advancement in the Human Scalp. Annals of Plastic Surgery. July 1997, 39 (1); 20-23.
Raposio, E, PierLuigi, S, Nordstrom, RE. Effects of Galeotomies on Scalp Flaps. Annals of Plastic Surgery. July 1998, 41 (1); 17-21.
Norwood, OT, Shiell, RC, Morrison, ID. Complications and Problems of Scalp Reductions. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 259-267.
Frechet, P. Scalp Extension. Journal of Dermatologic Surgery and Oncology. 1993, 19; 616-622.
Raposio, E, et al. Anchoring Galeal Flaps for Scalp Reduction Procedures. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. Dec 1998, 102 (7); 2454-2458.
Nordstrom, RE, Greco, M, Raposio, E. The “Nordstrom Suture” to Enhance Scalp Reductions. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. Feb 2001, 107 (2); 577-582.
Argenta, LC, Marks, MW, Anderson, RA. Treatment of Male Pattern Baldness by Tissue Expanders. In, Male Aesthetic Surgery, 2nd Ed, EH Courtiss, ed. Mosby, St.Louis; 1991.
Juri, J, Juri, C. The Juri Flap. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 269-282.
Unger, WP. Construction of the Hairline in Punch Transplanting. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 221-230.
Vallis, CP. Treatment of Male Pattern Baldness by Punches, Strips, and Flaps. In, Male Aesthetic Surgery, 2nd Ed, EH Courtiss, ed. Mosby, St.Louis; 1991.
Vallis, CP. The Strip Graft. Facial Plastic Surgery. 1985, 2 (3); 245-252.
Epstein, JS. Revision Surgical Hair Restoration: Repair of Undesirable Results. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. July 1999, 104 (1); 222-232.
Vogel, JE. Correction of the Cornrow Hair Transplant and Other Common Problems in Surgical Hair Restoration. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. Apr 2000, 105 (4); 1528-1536.
103. Quiz
104. Question 1 Hair development begins at what gestational age?
A. 1 - 4 weeks
B. 5 – 8 weeks
C. 9 – 12 weeks
D. 13 – 16 weeks
105. Question 2 List the components of a follicular unit
106. Question 3 Which drugs are approved by the FDA to treat hair loss
A. dutasteride
B. minoxidil
C. viagra
D. finasteride
E. colace
107. Question 4 What is the name of one of the main classification schemes for male pattern alopecia?
108. Question 5 True or false: Micrografts are 1 – 2 hairs and minigrafts are 3 – 4 hairs.
109. Question 6 True or false: Follicular unit transplantation must be done under general anesthesia.
110. Question 7 How many follicular units are expected from 1 square cm of donor tissue?
111. Question 8 True or false: Grafts can be placed immediately after making the recipient site (“stick and plant”).
112. Question 9 True or false: Follicular units should be placed in the direction that hair grooming will take place.
113. Question 10 True or false: Only one procedure is necessary with follicular unit transplantation.