Your doctor will talk with you about the treatments available. Together, you can decide on the best treatment for you.
Most forms of baldness have no cure. Some types will go away without treatment. Treatment may include:
- Certain medicines to promote hair growth (such as minoxidil and finasteride).
- Hair transplants.
- Scalp reduction.
- Skin lifts and grafts.
- Platelet rich plasma (PRP).
Hair replacement surgery
The interest in hair replacement has gone up over the past several years. There are a number of techniques available. But hair replacement surgery can't help those who have total baldness. Candidates for hair replacement must have a healthy growth of hair at the back and sides of the head. The hair on the back and sides of the head will serve as hair donor areas where grafts and flaps will be taken.
The four surgical methods of hair replacement include:
- Hair transplant. The surgeon removes small pieces of hair-bearing scalp from the back or sides of the head to be used as grafts. These grafts are then relocated to a bald or thinning area.
- Scalp expansion. A device called a tissue expander is placed underneath a hair-bearing area that is located next to a bald area. After several weeks, the tissue expander causes the skin to grow new skin cells. Another operation is then needed to place the newly expanded skin over the adjacent bald spot.
- Flap surgery. Flap surgery is ideal for covering large balding areas. A portion of the bald area is removed and a flap of the hair-bearing skin is placed on to the bald area while still attached at one end to its original blood supply.
- Scalp reduction. Scalp reduction is done to shrink the bald areas at the top and back of the head. It involves first removing the bald scalp. Then sections of the hair-bearing scalp are pulled together, filling in the bald area. This can be done alone or with hair transplantation.