Husain Ali Khan, Triple Board Certified in Cosmetic Surgery, Cosmetic Facial Surgery and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. Dr. Khan is well-respected by his peers worldwide, and has lectured internationally on various topics of Cosmetic Surgery. He has also published several book chapters on the subject of Cosmetic Surgery, co-edited two surgical text books, and has chaired Live Surgery Work Shops on the body, breast and face.
Dr. Khan is a Diplomate of the American Board of Cosmetic Surgery. He is also currently a part time faculty member with University of Miami School of Medicine Department of Surgery in the department of oral and maxillofacial surgery.vice. In recognition of their expertise, Dr. Ali Khan and Dr. Kamran Abolmaali have been invited to chair committees, lecture, and teach courses at numerous meetings around the world.
Dr. Khan is a Diplomate of the American Board of Cosmetic Surgery. He is also currently a part time faculty member with University of Miami School of Medicine Department of Surgery in the department of oral and maxillofacial surgery.vice. In recognition of their expertise, Dr. Ali Khan and Dr. Kamran Abolmaali have been invited to chair committees, lecture, and teach courses at numerous meetings around the world.
Services
Dr. Kamran Abolmaali is a highly skilled plastic surgeon who completed over 12 years of training in top programs in New York and London. He attended the esteemed Long Island Plastic Surgery Group residency program in Long Island, NY and Manhattan. In addition, he is trained in General Surgery at Marshall University and he is currently Board Certified with American Board of Surgery.
First of all, losing hair is normal! Our follicles go through cycles of growth ("anagen") lasting from 2 to 7 years before shutting down for a brief transitional phase ("catagen") and a 3-month resting phase ("telogen"). It is then that a hair is shed and a new cycle begins, providing replacement hairs for those that have been lost.
Simply put, a hair transplant involves taking permanently growing hair from the back and/or sides of the head ("donor area") and moving it to a balding or thinning area ("recipient area"). These carefully selected follicles are resistant to the effects of the hormone dihydrotestosterone, or "DHT, " so they will continue to grow even though the original follicles they are replacing have stopped growing.
The preferred method by which donor follicles should be harvested is the subject of enormous discussion, confusion, misinformation, misunderstanding, and controversy. These days, it seems that many surgeons and their prospective patients are paying more attention to the method by which donor follicles are obtained rather than to how they will be used to create a natural and esthetically pleasing hair transplant.
Female hair loss is far more common than most people would think: fewer than half of women go through life with a full head of hair, and the likelihood of losing hair increases by the decade. As distressing as it can be for a man to lose his hair, for a woman-especially a younger woman-it is emotionally devastating.