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(Before and After Pictures of one of our patients)

For the right patient, exhibiting the right hair and scalp characteristics, hair transplant surgery can be a life changing cosmetic procedure. However, not every hair loss sufferer is a good candidate for surgical hair restoration. It’s important to fully understand the criteria that makes a good hair transplant candidate in order to make a better informed decision when considering surgical hair restoration.

The best way to find out if you are a candidate for a hair restoration procedure is to go to a dermatologist or plastic surgeon specializing in hair restoration. The answer will depend on the cause of your hair loss, your age, the stability of your donor supply, how extensive you hair loss is, your expectations and a number of other important factors that will be taken into account.
For the right candidate hair restoration surgery can significantly improve your appearance and general sense well being.  You must have realistic expectations before undergoing a hair transplant procedure.
Here are some general types of patients that are great candidates for hair transplants:
The best candidates for hair restoration surgery are:

  • Men who have been losing their hair due to Male Pattern Baldness for more than five years or who have progressed to a Norwood class 3 or above.
  • Men with realistic expectations and who understand that their hair loss might continue to progress even if they are taking prescription medication to stop the progression.
  • Men who have been balding for many years and who’s pattern has stabilized and are interested in just adding some hair to provide a more youthful appearance.
  • Men and women who have lost hair due to trauma or burns
  • Men and women who have lost hair due to other cosmetic procedures such as face-lifts.

Some women are candidates for hair restoration surgery. They are:

  • Women who have suffered hair loss due to mechanical or traction alopecia (non-hormonal).
  • Women who have had previous cosmetic or plastic surgery and are concerned about hair loss around the incision sites.
  • Women who have a distinct pattern of baldness, similar to that of male pattern baldness. This includes hairline recession, vertex thinning (on the crown or top of the scalp), and a donor area that is not affected by androgenetic alopecia.
  • Women who suffer hair loss due to trauma, including burn victims, scarring from accidents, and chemical burns.
  • Women with alopecia marginalis, a condition that looks very similar to traction alopecia.


Please visit the website of Dr. Bishara, who specializes in Hair RestorationRobotic Hair Transplants and Plastic Surgery at www.MarkBisharaMD.com or call our office at (817) 473-2120.

en Español

 
(Antes y después de las imágenes de uno de nuestros pacientes)
Para el paciente adecuado, mostrando las características del cabello y del cuero cabelludo derecha, la cirugía de trasplante de cabello puede ser un cambio de vida procedimiento cosmético. Sin embargo, no todo paciente a la pérdida del cabello es un buen candidato para la restauración quirúrgica del cabello. Es importante comprender plenamente los criterios que hacen un buen candidato a trasplante de pelo con el fin de tomar una decisión mejor informada al considerar la restauración quirúrgica del cabello.
La mejor manera de averiguar si usted es un candidato para un procedimiento de restauración del cabello es ir a un dermatólogo o cirujano plástico que se especializa en la restauración del cabello. La respuesta dependerá de la causa de su pérdida de cabello, su edad, la estabilidad de su oferta de donantes, lo extenso que la pérdida del cabello es, de sus expectativas y una serie de otros factores importantes que se tendrán en cuenta.
Para la cirugía de restauración capilar candidato adecuado puede mejorar significativamente su apariencia y la sensación general de bienestar. Usted debe tener expectativas realistas antes de someterse a un procedimiento de trasplante de cabello.
Estos son algunos tipos generales de los pacientes que son grandes candidatos a trasplantes de cabello:
Los mejores candidatos para la cirugía de restauración del cabello son:
Los hombres que han ido perdiendo su cabello debido a la calvicie de patrón masculino durante más de cinco años o que han progresado a una clase Norwood 3 o superior.Los hombres con expectativas realistas y que entienden que su pérdida de cabello puede continuar progresando incluso si están tomando medicamentos de prescripción para detener la progresión.Los hombres que han sido quedando calvos por muchos años y que son modelo se ha estabilizado y está interesado en sólo añadir un poco de pelo para proporcionar un aspecto más juvenil.Los hombres y las mujeres que han perdido el pelo debido a un traumatismo o quemadurasLos hombres y las mujeres que han perdido el pelo debido a otros procedimientos estéticos, como liftings.Algunas mujeres son candidatos para la cirugía de restauración capilar.
Ellos son:
Las mujeres que han sufrido la pérdida de cabello debido a la alopecia de tracción mecánica o (no hormonal).Las mujeres que han tenido cirugía plástica o cosmética anterior y están preocupados por la pérdida de pelo alrededor de las incisiones.Las mujeres que tienen un patrón distinto de la calvicie, similar a la de la calvicie de patrón masculino. Esto incluye recesión línea del cabello, adelgazamiento vértice (en la corona o parte superior del cuero cabelludo), y una zona donante que no está afectada por la alopecia androgenética.Las mujeres que sufren de pérdida de cabello debido a un traumatismo, incluidas las víctimas de quemaduras, cicatrices de accidentes y quemaduras químicas.Las mujeres con alopecia marginalis, una condición que se ve muy similar a la alopecia por tracción.
Por favor, visite el sitio web del Dr. Bishara, que se especializa en la restauración del pelo, robóticos trasplantes de pelo y Cirugía Plástica en www.MarkBisharaMD.com o llame a nuestra oficina al (817) 473-2120.

At the Office of Dr. Bishara and The Paragon Plastic Surgery & med Spa, we want our male patients to be educated about their health too. In a recent article in MedScape, Dr. David Johnson discusses new breakthroughs in screening for colon cancer

WHERE WE’RE AT WITH SCREENING

Hello. I am Dr. David Johnson, Professor of Medicine and Chief of Gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk, Virginia.
Cologuard®, a stool DNA test manufactured by Exact Sciences (Madison, Wisconsin) has just been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). It has received a tremendous amount of attention in the lay press, and recently the pivotal study analyses were published in the New England Journal of Medicine.[1] I will give you an overview of how this test might play out in clinical practice for gastroenterologists, primary care providers, other healthcare providers, and patients.
We are doing better with colon cancer screening, but we still are missing 35%-40% of patients who are eligible for healthcare screening. We have seen a tremendous increase in screening over the past decade, but in the past 3 years, this has leveled off to 60%-62%, and the rate of rise in screening has plateaued.[2] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) set their target for colon cancer screening at 80% by 2018, but the current rate of 62% has been holding for the past 3 years. We have seen a 46% reduction in colon cancer-related deaths over the past decade, primarily from the emphasis on colon cancer screening, but nonetheless, screening rates are flat and we are not making progress. What is the problem?
Colonoscopy is the gold standard for screening, but some patients are resistant to having a colonoscopy for many reasons: the “prep,” and taking a day off work, for example.
When the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) published colon cancer screening recommendations in 2008,[3] few options were available beyond flexible sigmoidoscopy, fecal occult blood testing, and colonoscopy — the only screening methods that met evidence-based standards. At that time, the USPSTF did not accept CT colonography or even the stool DNA test as screening options, because in 2004, the sensitivity of the stool DNA test was only marginally better than 50% for the detection of colon cancer.[4] It was better than the fecal occult blood test by a margin of 4, and it was not very good at all for detecting advanced adenomas.

THE MULTITARGETED APPROACH TO SCREENING

Fast-forwarding to the present technology, the Cologuard is a new and revised stool DNA test. It detects aberrant methylation markers on 2 promoter genes (BPM3 andNDRG4) as well as KRAS mutations, and beta-actin, which is a reference gene for human DNA quantity. In addition to those 4 biomarkers, Cologuard includes a fecal immunohistochemical test (FIT). This is the Polymedco test, and it is set at 100 ng of hemoglobin per mL of buffer. This is the standard threshold used in screening trials for FIT, and it was added to increase the sensitivity of detection of colon cancer.
Approximately 10,000 patients were enrolled in the pivotal study, all of whom had not had recent screenings for at least 9 years for colonoscopy or 5 years for CT colonography or barium enema. These patients were evaluated with colonoscopy and with FIT as well as the combination Cologuard test. The background prevalence of colon cancer in the study was 0.7%. Advanced adenomas were defined as adenomas with high-grade dysplasia, adenomas with 25% or more villous component, or sessile serrated polyps 1 cm or larger in size. With this new twist on advanced lesions, the background prevalence for advanced adenomas was 7.6%.

HIGHEST SENSITIVITY OF STOOL-BASED TESTS

The sensitivity of Cologuard for detection of colorectal cancer was 92.3% compared with 73.8% for FIT alone.
For detection of advanced adenomas, the sensitivity of Cologuard was 42.4%, and for FIT alone it was 23.8%. Fecal testing has not been very sensitive for the detection of advanced adenoma, but with Cologuard, we are seeing nearly a doubling of sensitivity with stool DNA, a big upswing in advances in stool-based testing. For the detection of high-grade dysplasia, the Cologuard had a sensitivity of 69.2% vs. 46.2% for FIT alone. For sessile serrated polyps, the sensitivity was 42.1% for stool DNA testing and 5.1% for FIT, a huge margin of difference.
Of interest, the stool DNA test did not vary by disease stage (that is, it was as good for stage 1 disease as it was for stage 4 disease) or by location. Fecal occult blood testing was always more sensitive for distal lesions, but that is not the case with stool DNA testing. FIT sensitivity catches up in later stages of disease, becoming equal to stool DNA in stage 3 and 4 disease. Stool DNA is more sensitive for advanced adenomas, especially for more distal lesions — sensitivity was 54.5% (distal) vs 48.9% (proximal) — and for larger lesions.

PUTTING COLOGUARD INTO PRACTICE

As we put this into perspective, there are a couple of caveats.
One is that we don’t know what the test performance characteristics will be when this is ultimately rolled out and used in practice. In 6.4% of patients who had the stool DNA test, for whatever reason the samples couldn’t be analyzed. In the context of the baseline prevalence of colon cancer in this population, that means that they lost the results for 689 patients, and 4 cancers could have been missed just because the test could not be done. That can change the statistics a little bit. The number needed to screen to detect 1 cancer is 154 for colonoscopy; for the stool DNA/Cologuard test, it is 166; and for FIT, it is 208.
The recommendation from the multisociety task force and the American College of Gastroenterology guidelines[5] is that if stool DNA testing is used, it should be done at 3-year intervals.
Patients should not view this as an alternative to colonoscopy, and it should be offered to patients only after they have explicit guidance that colonoscopy is the best test that we have for prevention because we can identify more precancerous polyps than we can with any stool-based testing. A colonoscopy needs to be done by a quality colonoscopist. Detection rates will vary on the basis of the adenoma detection rate of the individual colonoscopist, so the better we can define our adenoma detection rates, the better patients can select a colonoscopist by asking, “What is your adenoma detection rate?”

ALTERNATIVE TO COLONOSCOPY, NOT A REPLACEMENT

Will Cologuard become a replacement for colonoscopy? No. It is a test that should be offered to patients who refuse colonoscopy. It will still be an expensive test — the estimated cost is $590. It is money well spent if it brings the people who refuse colonoscopy into a screening program. The cost analysis and cost effectiveness remain to be defined, along with the test performance characteristics, how the test performs outside of a clinical study, and patients’ acceptance of the test. It appears that acceptability is higher than for standard FIT or the fecal occult blood test.
No screening is not an option. Any screening is better than nothing. We have a screening gap of approximately 20%; we are going to need to increase screening rates from 60% to 80% by 2018. Hopefully, this will stimulate discussions between patients and their healthcare providers. Colonoscopy is still the preferred strategy, but for anything that raises the awareness of screening and acceptability of screening, I am all in.
This is Dr. David Johnson. Thanks for listening.
 

What is a Robotic Hair Transplant?

In Robotic FUE hair transplant procedures, follicular units are isolated using the ARTAS robotic system. The ARTAS system is a computerized, image-guided robot that automates the labor intensive process of extracting grafts. Its advantage over other FUE techniques is due to its precision and consistency in extracting grafts. All FUE procedures at The Paragon Plastic Surgery & Med Spa are performed using the ARTAS robot.
ARTAS is the very latest technology in hair restoration.  Dr. Bishara is using the ARTAS System in his Mansfield and Southlake offices. This interactive, computer assisted equipment employs image guidance to enhance the quality of hair follicle harvesting. ARTAS is the first hair transplant robot to improve the most challenging aspects of Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE).
Hair Transplants | Dallas TX | Mansfield TXThis physician-controlled, state-of-the-art system enables the harvesting of hair follicles during hair restoration procedures. It offers numerous beneficial features, including an image-guided robotic arm, special imaging technologies, small dermal punches and a computer interface. The ARTAS System is capable of identifying and harvesting individual follicular units to implement the FUE technique. The device, guided by cameras and 3-D imaging software, can perform the dissection of hair follicles individually at a rate of up to 1,000 per hour.
Please visit our website at www.MarkBisharaMD.com for more information on robotic hair transplants or call our office at (817) 473-2120.
 


Please also visit our website to learn more about ARTAS Robotic Hair Transplants System at www.MarkBisharaMD.com or call our office at (817) 473-2120


Please also visit our website to learn more about ARTAS Robotic Hair Transplants System at www.MarkBisharaMD.com or call our office at (817) 473-2120