Monday, June 16, 2014

The Mental Effects Of Loosing Your Hair

By Alice Shellington


As a little girl the word tomorrow never had much meaning to me. Life had infinite chances. Going to school and playing outside with my mates was my largest concerns. If you are above the age of 35 you are going to relate to what I am about to say next.

At present I'm a 42 years old lady with 2 kids, and a fabulous hubby. I thought my life was perfect. Then one day as I was going through my morning regime I spotted that my hair was thinning. I thought, well, maybe its stress. The children are older and more rebellious, and I remembered reading somewhere that stressed caused baldness. I didn't give it much more thought.

Roughly 30 Days Later

Here I was standing in the mirror once again. I was nearly certain that my hair was thinning, and it needed to be more than just stress. As I went through my day, I felt as if everybody that I faced spotted my thinning hair. My self confidence hasn't ever been so low. My life was curving out of control. I started to distance myself from my children, my husband, and my work mates.

I started trying every OTC treatment available from the market. I was continually online looking for miracle solutions. I attempted at least a half-a-dozen hair styles. For awhile that caused me to feel a little better, but the truth is my hair was continuing to fall out.

I read online that dying your hair a lighter color was a good method to cover up thinning hair. It was suppose to create an illusion the hair was more dense. It appeared to work for awhile, but the reality is the truth.

After work one day, my hubby was sat at the table. He asked me if I'd sit down. I thought to myself this was it. I had been so cold that he was going to ask me for a divorce. To my continuing surprise he'd been doing research on alopecia restoration. He knew what I was going through without me ever saying a word to him about it. He explained the pros and cons to me about the process.

Six Months After Having a Hair Transplant

My hair looked stunning, and the best part was it was my natural hair. It essentially looked better now than it did before it started thinning. I seriously recommend hair restoration to any person subjected to thinning hair.

Casting back over everything, I was astonished to discover the mental effects that baldness had on me. Thinning hair nearly destroyed my life.




About the Author:



Sunday, June 15, 2014

Understanding The Eyebrow Restoration Process

By Rene Brown


Who notices eyebrows? No one, notices until they are gone. So , if you are one of those individuals who suffer from thinning eyebrows, you are fortunate. Thanks to current day technology eyebrow restoration has become extremely cheap. The process will help you to achieve a more natural brow line as well as touch up areas where there could be some alopecia.

What's Eyebrow Restoration?

Eyebrow restoration is a surgical procedure intended to permanently revive and/or customise the appearance of the eyebrows. It was originally reserved for burn victims and patients of sicknesses that stop hair from growing in the eyebrow region. Eyebrow restoration surgeries - or transplants - have since evolved into a cosmetic process favored by people wishing to have perfect eyebrows.

Some traditional hair restoration surgeons offer eyebrow restorations too. Both procedures should be only performed by certificated surgeons who concentrate on hair and eyebrow transplantation.

The most popular hair and eyebrow restoration surgery strategy is follicular unit transplantation, which involves the removal of donor follicles from the back of the patient's head (where hair has a tendency to be more permanent). Once removed, the "donor area" is then stitched back up with no apparent scars. The donor follicles are then transplanted into the "trouble spots" of the patient's scalp.

The most vital aspect of transplanting eyebrows is to follow the natural hair direction awfully closely. This entails very sophisticated angle changes to recreate the fan-like splay of hair at the medial aspect of the brow and the converging hair direction as one moves laterally along the brow. Most importantly, the receiver sites for the hairs should be made with a fine-gauge needle that literally slides along the outside of the skin as the sites are being made, as this could insure the hair will lie as flat as practicable on the surface of the skin as it grows.




About the Author: