
Courtesy of Dr. Sanusi Umar
J.M., who requested to be identified only by his initials, was one of Dr. Sanusi Umar's patients who received leg hair in his hairline.
By Bill Briggs
The nicknames are meant make to their targets bristle: “Yo, Doll Hair,” or, more cringe-worthy, “What’s up, Chia Head?”
Often, though, such cracks are an accurate description of reworked foreheads after people undergo hair transplants. Traditional hair plugs or replanted locks from the neck are usually thicker than the fine strands that normally grow somewhere above the eyebrows, leaving a coarse (and obviously fake) hairline.
But a Los Angeles dermatologist says he has devised a cosmetic solution to solve that gnarly, Raggedy-Ann look at the front edge of the scalp. And his method seems so simple, follicley challenged folks may kick themselves for not dreaming it up.
Leg hair.
Yes, those curly, fluffy tufts on the thighs, knees and calves that men generally ignore and many women dutifully shave are ideal for transplanting just in front of and behind the original hairline, according to a study authored by Dr. Sanusi Umar and published this month in the Archives of Dermatology.
“It is a breakthrough because transplantation has been around for a long time, through many evolutions -- from big plugs that look like doll hair to what we have today: hairlines that can look totally undetectable,” says Umar, who heads DermHair Clinic.
“A trained eye can tell (an artificial hairline). Quite a number of our patients who come in don’t have bad transplants (from other clinics),” Umar says. “But they complain that people still stare at their hairlines. It bothers them. When you do any cosmetic procedure, you don’t do it so that people can tell you’ve had it done.”
OK, here are the bald facts: Leg hair meshes better with existing, frontal head hair precisely because it is thinner, Umar says. His study cites two of his patients who had leg-hair procedures performed on their hairlines about six years ago. (He waited to publish his findings so he could prove that the leg hair doesn’t eventually fall out). When leg hair grows atop heads, it can be groomed, styled and cut just like normal hair -- so patients aren’t left with random straight strands and a crop of new, coiled ones, the study states.
Umar has done such transplants on men and women, brunettes and blondes, he says. About 80 percent of the transplanted leg hairs grow successfully. A typical hairline transplant requires about 1,200 new follicles. The cost is $8 to $10 per follicle (or $9,600 to $12,000). The time needed to recreate a hairline: five to six hours.
But what about the legs? Won’t naked calves and bare thighs be a dead giveaway that your hairline may have been purposely relocated a bit to the north?
“On the legs, what we try to do is leave as few telltale signs as possible,” Umar says. “We want to diffusely take it, so it doesn’t look like there are patches there.”
And, ladies, if you’re considering this work, you won’t need to spend an entire winter growing out your leg hair.
Says Umar: “We need only stubble.”
Bill Briggs is a frequent contributor to msnbc.com and author of “The Third Miracle.”
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interesting
As I sat in this chair, a place that's ideal for hair harvesting came to mind -- especially if the guy is older. It won't really be missed because most sighted people would rather die or go blind than look there.
I couldn't stop laughing as I read this because I kept thinking about a "commercial" I saw on SNL for hair transplants "from an area where no will notice" and in the "after" photos, you all of these guys- and a woman or two, with very straight hair on the sides and so curly it look like an Afro on top...to funny.
I would have thought hair from anywhere on the body would be used for transplants. I find it surprising this is new.
I'm in my mid-fifties, since the hair on my head began disappearing about 10 years ago, I've noticed that it has sprouted in abundance on my back, and in my nose and ears. If you could arrange to transplant it from these locations, you may be onto something!
Apparently you don't lose your hair, it just wanders.
Dan, just as with elderly Jewish people hair tends to migrate south as the winter years of your life approach.
I don't know about you, but the hair on different parts of the body is pretty distinct. I would think leg hair would be a bad candidate for many, like me -- my leg hair is curly, my head hair is straight. Also, the color is different. I would think leg hair would only work for a pretty small percent of people, in terms of being a good match in consistency and color.
No pubie head for me. Thanks.
How about the unwanted hair from "down there"?
Yes. Good idea. One could have a patch of curly hair on the front of their head.
You could even go for the wonderful little landing strip design right on top of your head, just so everyone knows what you are really about...
How about back hair? As I went bald from the rear view I look like a bald bear.
I am all for it. Ummm you mean mine?
Hair today gone tomorrow
Like money!
What next?
Or you could save $10K and work on your self-esteem.
Said the man with a full head of hair!!
Better than other places I can think of !!!
Fur he's a jolly good follicle.
Saturday Night Live had a great skit about hair transplants "down there".
Fascinating. Another operation I need that I'll never be able to afford.
Reminds me of an old joke: she gets any more face lifts, she's going to have a goatee.
Whatever, vanity is silly i am fine with being ugly . Besides i believe 12000 dollars would allow me to pick up a woman maybe two.
I would just save my money and wait for the stem cell thing which apparently completely reverses the whole process.
In 20 years. Maybe.
A drug was created in the 60's that crew back hair. The problem it crew hair all over your body and was therefore pulled from the market.
What was that? Is this a joke?
Yes but if you use that other "hair" you know the stuff between the legs you would look much sexier!
Just shave it already! Women love my bald head.