Premature male baldness is one of the few physical flaws
Transcription
Premature male baldness is one of the few physical flaws
Premature male baldness is one of the few physical flaws still up for ridicule. But it's no joke, says Francesco Hornak-and besides, fixing it is big business for 'cures'." No wonder an estimated $3.5 billion is spent annually in America alone on trying to halt baldness. FUE is labour-intensive and highly skilled. It is performed under local anaesthetic, typically over two sessions, each taking several hours. Individual follicles are extracted under magnification with a small round punch and forceps, then when the required number of grafts have been taken, they are implanted into the balding areas. "It's no more painful than a filling," explains one transplantee in his thirties, who wants to remain anonymous. "Recovery takes about 10 days, though any pain usually subsides after 72 hours." Results are gradual. "You don't wake up like David Hasselhoff - it takes 12 to 18 months for the hair to grow and for the full results to be apparent," explains patient X. "It's a good thing, because you can adjust psychologically." It also allows men to keep quiet about it if they wish apparently, people don't notice a progressively thickening mane the way they would an overnight transformation. Have they or haven't they? from left, James Nesbitt, Mel Gibson, Elton John and John Travolta Such a treatment could set you back $15-20,000, although, strangely, the best surgeons (mainly found in America) charge less than many cowboy clinics. One celebrated practitioner is New York's Dr Alan Feller, who is raved about as "an artist" by his many devotees. If Feller is the hair-transplant god, his apostle is a 36-year-old man who goes by the pseudonym "Spex". A businessman by day, Spex moonlights as Feller's ambassador and unofficial counsellor. Having been scarred by a bad hair transplant in 2000, Spex was "repaired", as he puts it, by Feller. He has since made it his mission to spread the word about hairloss treatments and transplants, and speaks with a quasi-religious zeal and touching compassion about his subject. Because, in truth, this isn't funny at all. Spex talks about the near-suicidal young men he meets, who feel "completely alone and out of control. You become obsessed. Every waking moment is spent analysing your hair loss. It's about identity and self-esteem and it completely strips men of their confidence". His website spexhair.com gets 200 unique hits per day. "I want to save men from making the mistakes I did," he says. "Because these guys are desperate, there are lots of ruthless people out there ready to swindle them." He's not exaggerating. Dip into the online HT community and you will find a vast swirling world of neurosis. Sufferers speak a hyper-technical language, as if by categorising and quantifying their follicles, they will regain control of their condition. They post miserable scalp close-ups (always covering their faces) and rattle off odd labels that sound like postcodes: "I've been balding since 18. Currently I'm an anterior NW/).. I inherited the balding gene from my maternal grandfather. He's a NW5A and started balding very early." Other posts reveal the devastating impact hair loss has on young men: "It was at that moment that I realised... I WAS GOING BALD. I fell into a deep, deep depression. I even thought about ending it all..." After a glimpse of such heartache, the hair transplant suddenly doesn't seem so drastic (or so funny) after all. ^ JANUARY 15-16 2011 / THE WEEKEND AUSTRALIAN MAGAZINE 27