The Journal of dermatological treatment | 2021
Artificial hair implantation for hair restoration.
Abstract
BACKGROUND\nAndrogenetic alopecia (AGA) is the most common cause of hair loss in men and women. Artificial hair implantation is considered an alternative treatment when the donor area is depleted or unsuitable for hair transplantation. The use of artificial hair implants remains controversial, particularly because this practice has been banned by the US FDA.\n\n\nOBJECTIVE\nTo summarize various aspects of artificial hair implantation.\n\n\nMETHODS\nWe discuss the history of artificial hair implantation, development of new biocompatible fibers (Biofibre®, Nido Z-type), patient eligibility for this treatment, implantation technique, follow-up, immune response to the implanted fibers, and post-implantation complications. We performed a methodological quality assessment of the clinical studies that investigated artificial hair implantation using the Canada Institute of Health Economics (IHE) Quality Appraisal Tool for Case Series (Interventional).\n\n\nRESULTS\nAlthough the studies evaluating the use of artificial hair fibers appear promising, the methodological quality of most of them was poor and fair , due to lack of randomization, absence of control groups, improper study design and inappropriate outcome measures.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nArtificial hair implantation has been received with skepticism among physicians due to the complications reported. Further high-quality research needs to be performed to ascertain the safety and efficacy of artificial hair implantation.