Hair Transplant

Hair Transplant in Turkey

Hair loss can affect confidence, appearance, and the way patients feel about themselves. At Marina Clinic, hair transplant treatment is planned around the cause of hair loss, the stability of the donor area, the pattern of thinning, and the long-term design of the hairline. A transplant is not simply about moving grafts. It is about choosing the right candidate, the right technique, and the right graft strategy for a natural result that still works as hair loss changes over time. Hair transplantation is a procedure that moves hair from a stable donor area, usually the back of the scalp, to thinning or bald areas, and works best in appropriately screened patients with stable patterned hair loss and sufficient donor density.

What Is Hair Loss?

Hair loss, also called alopecia, refers to thinning, shedding, recession, or bald patches affecting the scalp and sometimes other parts of the body. It may be temporary or permanent and can result from heredity, hormonal change, aging, medical conditions, stress, nutritional issues, or mechanical damage such as long-term traction from tight hairstyles. Patterned hair loss is the most common form seen in transplant candidates.

What Is a Hair Transplant?

A hair transplant is a surgical hair restoration procedure in which healthy follicles are harvested from a donor area and implanted into areas with visible thinning or baldness. The goal is not to recreate the exact density a patient had before hair loss, but to create the illusion of natural density with a stable, age-appropriate design and good graft survival. Proper screening is essential because a transplant is most successful when hair loss is stable, the donor area is strong, and expectations are realistic.

Main Causes of Hair Loss

1. Androgenetic Alopecia (Male and Female Pattern Hair Loss)

 This is the most common cause of hair loss worldwide and the most common reason patients seek a hair transplant. It causes progressive thinning, miniaturization, and recession, especially along the hairline, mid-scalp, and crown. In men, recession often starts at the temples or crown. In women, thinning is more often diffuse across the top while the frontal hairline may be preserved.

2. Traction Alopecia

This type of hair loss happens when the hair is repeatedly pulled by tight hairstyles such as braids, buns, ponytails, or cornrows. Early traction alopecia may improve if tension is stopped, but long-standing traction can become permanent and may later require restoration.

3. Telogen Effluvium

This is diffuse shedding that can happen after major stress, illness, surgery, pregnancy, thyroid disease, iron deficiency, malnutrition, rapid weight loss, or some medications. It usually causes overall shedding rather than stable patterned baldness, which is why it often requires diagnosis and treatment first rather than immediate transplantation.

4. Alopecia Areata

This is an autoimmune condition that often causes sudden patchy hair loss. It is not usually a routine transplant indication while active, because outcomes can be unpredictable and recurrence may affect graft survival.

5. Scarring or Inflammatory Alopecia

Some inflammatory and cicatricial alopecias permanently damage follicles. In active disease, transplantation is generally contraindicated because the procedure can fail or worsen the condition. In selected patients with long-term inactive disease, transplantation may still be considered carefully.

Severe Hair Loss Problems That Need Proper Analysis Before a Hair Transplant

Not every patient with hair loss should move directly to surgery. The cases that need the most careful assessment are the ones where transplant planning can easily go wrong.

Unstable or Rapidly Progressive Hair Loss

If hair loss is still actively progressing, especially in younger patients, transplanting too early can create an unnatural pattern later and use up donor grafts too soon. Medical stabilization is often advised first.

Poor Donor Area Density

A transplant depends on harvesting follicles from a stable donor area. If donor density is weak or affected by diffuse thinning, the final result may be limited and overharvesting can damage appearance in the donor zone.

Diffuse Unpatterned Alopecia

When thinning also affects the typical donor areas, transplantation becomes much less reliable because there may be no stable reserve to harvest from.

Active Scalp Disease or Inflammation

Redness, scaling, itching, pustules, or inflammatory/scarring scalp disease should be evaluated before planning surgery. Active disease can reduce graft survival and may worsen with surgery.

Alopecia Areata and Other Autoimmune Hair Loss

Patchy autoimmune hair loss is not the same as stable patterned baldness. These patients usually need medical diagnosis and disease control first.

Unrealistic Expectations

A transplant does not restore childhood density. The real objective is natural-looking coverage and a long-term plan that matches future hair loss. Patients who expect unlimited density, very low aggressive hairlines, or total reversal of baldness need detailed counseling before surgery.

Hair Transplant Procedure: Step by Step

1. Consultation and Hair Analysis

The first step is to identify the type of hair loss, assess the donor area, estimate graft needs, review medical history, and plan a conservative, natural hairline. Appropriate candidates usually have stable patterned loss, a healthy scalp, and realistic expectations.

2. Hairline Design and Graft Planning

The surgeon maps the frontal line, temples, mid-scalp, or crown based on facial proportions, age, and future hair-loss risk. Conservative design is important because overaggressive hairlines can consume too many grafts early.

3. Donor Area Preparation

The donor area, usually the back of the scalp, is prepared and local anesthesia is used. Hair transplantation is typically done under local anesthetic, often as a day procedure.

4. Graft Harvesting

Follicular units are extracted using the selected technique, such as FUE or DHI-related workflows. In FUT, a strip is removed and dissected into grafts, but many modern clinics focus mainly on FUE-based methods. The harvesting method affects scarring pattern, graft handling, and recovery.

5. Channel Opening or Direct Implantation

Depending on the technique, recipient sites are created first and then grafts are placed, or grafts are implanted more directly using an implanter pen. Angle, direction, and density planning are critical for a natural result.

6. Implantation

Each graft is placed according to the design plan. Single grafts are usually prioritized for the front line, while larger follicular units may be used behind that to build density.

7. Recovery and Growth Timeline

The grafts are delicate in the first days. Scabbing, swelling, and temporary shedding are common. The transplanted hair often sheds after a few weeks, early regrowth commonly starts around month 4, and fuller results are usually evaluated over roughly 10 to 18 months.

Hair Transplant Techniques

DHI Hair Transplant

What is DHI?

DHI, or Direct Hair Implantation, is a hair transplant method that uses a specialized implanter pen to place grafts into the recipient area with very controlled direction and placement. It is generally built on follicular extraction rather than strip surgery.

How does DHI work?

Hair follicles are harvested individually from the donor area. The grafts are then loaded into an implanter pen and implanted into the target area with careful control over angle, direction, and spacing.

When is DHI more effective?

DHI is often chosen when the goal is:

  • refined hairline work
  • dense work in smaller or medium areas
  • more controlled implantation
  • cases where precision in the frontal zone matters most

Best suited for

  • hairline refinement
  • temple work
  • smaller to moderate areas
  • patients prioritizing placement precision

FUE Hair Transplant

What is FUE?

FUE, or Follicular Unit Extraction, is one of the most common modern hair transplant methods. Individual follicular units are extracted one by one from the donor area and implanted into thinning or bald areas.

How does FUE work?

The surgeon harvests grafts individually, usually from the occipital donor area. Recipient channels are then created, and the grafts are placed into those sites.

When is FUE more effective?

FUE is often effective for:

  • broad areas of thinning
  • larger sessions
  • patients who want to avoid a linear strip scar
  • men with male pattern baldness and a good donor area

Best suited for

  • frontal and mid-scalp restoration
  • larger graft sessions
  • patients who prefer a modern extraction method with tiny dot scars instead of a linear scar

The NHS identifies FUE and FUT as the two main procedural families. In FUE, individual follicles are removed and transplanted, while FUT removes a strip of scalp that is then dissected into grafts.

Sapphire FUE Hair Transplant

What is Sapphire FUE?

Sapphire FUE is a variation of FUE in which sapphire blades are used to create recipient channels. The extraction principle remains FUE, but the channel-opening stage uses sapphire-tipped blades rather than conventional steel blades.

How does Sapphire FUE work?

After FUE graft harvesting, sapphire blades are used to open recipient sites with attention to direction, density, and incision quality. Grafts are then implanted into those channels.

When is Sapphire FUE more effective?

Sapphire FUE is commonly selected for:

  • patients seeking a refined implantation pattern
  • cases where channel design is especially important
  • medium to larger restoration zones
  • patients wanting FUE with a premium channel-opening approach

Best suited for

  • frontal line and mid-scalp work
  • patients seeking structured dense packing in selected areas
  • patients who prefer FUE but want a more premium variant

FUT / Strip Method

What is FUT?

FUT, also called the strip method, removes a narrow strip of scalp from the donor area and divides it into grafts for transplantation.

How does FUT work?

A donor strip is removed, closed with stitches, and then microscopically dissected into follicular units before implantation.

When is FUT more effective?

FUT may be considered when maximizing graft numbers from a single donor strip is important, but it leaves a linear scar and is not the preferred option for all patients.

Best suited for

  • selected cases requiring large graft yield
  • patients who do not wear very short hair
  • clinics and surgeons who still use strip surgery as part of their offering

The NHS notes that FUT involves removing a thin strip of skin with hair from the back of the head, dividing it into grafts, and closing the donor area with stitches, which leaves a scar that is usually concealed unless the hair is very short.

Which Hair Transplant Technique Is Right for You?

The best technique depends on:

  • the pattern and stage of hair loss
  • donor area quality
  • the number of grafts needed
  • whether the main target is the hairline, mid-scalp, or crown
  • the patient’s haircut preference
  • whether the priority is precision, coverage, or both

In practical terms:

  • DHI is often preferred for precision and more focused dense work.
  • FUE is often preferred for versatile, broad restoration.
  • Sapphire FUE is often chosen as a premium FUE variation.

FUT may still be relevant in selected cases, but many patients now prefer FUE-based approaches.

Hair Transplant Packages

The exact graft number should always be confirmed after scalp analysis. Still, these are useful planning tiers.

1500 Grafts Hair Transplant Package

 Suitable for:

  • early recession
  • temple restoration
  • frontal line correction
  • smaller focused areas

This package is often considered when the patient does not need extensive crown or mid-scalp work.

3000 Grafts Hair Transplant Package

 Suitable for:

  • moderate hairline recession
  • frontal and mid-scalp thinning
  • broader restoration than a small touch-up case

This is one of the most common planning ranges for men with visible pattern hair loss.

5000 Grafts Hair Transplant Package

 Suitable for:

  • advanced hair loss
  • extensive front, mid-scalp, and partial crown work
  • patients needing major coverage in one or staged treatment plan

Large sessions require careful donor management and realistic density planning, especially in patients who may continue to lose native hair over time. Overuse of donor grafts can compromise long-term strategy.

Hair Transplant Prices

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Treatment

Price

Hair Transplant DHI

1650

Hair Transplant FUE

1400

Hair Transplant FUE Sapphire

1650

Hair Transplant 2nd Session DHI                                                                

1100

 

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  • 400

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Who Is a Good Candidate for Hair Transplant?

A good candidate usually has:

  • stable patterned hair loss
  • a healthy scalp
  • sufficient donor density
  • realistic expectations
  • at least moderate visible thinning in the target area

Hair transplantation is generally most suitable for permanent patterned baldness and less suitable for conditions such as active alopecia areata or active inflammatory/scarring alopecia. Young patients with rapidly progressive loss often need stabilization and long-term planning first.

You may be a good candidate if:

  • your hair loss pattern is established
  • your donor area is strong
  • you want natural improvement, not unrealistic density
  • you understand that future hair loss may continue

You may need further analysis first if:

  • your hair loss is sudden or diffuse
  • you have scalp redness, scaling, or inflammation
  • you have patchy autoimmune hair loss
  • you are very young and still losing hair quickly
  • your donor area is weak

Possible Side Effects and Risks

Hair transplantation is generally safe, but it is still a surgical procedure. Common short-term effects include tightness, soreness, swelling, scabbing, and temporary shedding. More serious but less common risks include bleeding, infection, allergic reaction to anesthetic, visible scarring, poor graft survival, or an unsatisfactory cosmetic result.

For honest patient education, the page should clearly explain:

  • temporary swelling
  • scabbing and redness
  • shock loss
  • donor soreness
  • delayed final density
  • the possibility that additional treatment or a second session may be needed

Recovery After Hair Transplant

Most patients return gradually to daily activities, but the first two weeks are especially important because the grafts are still securing. Temporary shedding after a few weeks is common and does not mean the transplant failed. New hair often starts becoming visible around month 4, while fuller maturation may take 10 to 18 months.

FAQ

These are the kinds of questions patients repeatedly ask on platforms like Reddit and Quora, even when phrased differently.

That depends on the extent of recession, the size of the bald area, donor density, hair caliber, contrast between hair and scalp, and whether the target is the hairline, mid-scalp, crown, or all three. A proper scalp analysis is always needed before confirming graft numbers.

 

The transplanted follicles are usually taken from more resistant donor zones, so they are generally long-lasting. However, existing non-transplanted hair may continue to miniaturize over time, which is why long-term planning matters.

 

The procedure is typically performed under local anesthesia, so patients are usually awake without feeling operative pain. Some soreness, tightness, swelling, or discomfort afterward is common.

 

 Early shedding is common after surgery. New growth often starts around month 4, and fuller results are generally judged over 10 to 18 months.

 

Shock loss is temporary shedding that can affect transplanted hairs and sometimes nearby native hairs after the procedure. It is one of the most common concerns patients ask about during recovery. In unstable hair loss, the risk to native miniaturizing hair is more important, which is why proper candidate selection matters.

Not automatically. DHI is often chosen for precision-focused implantation, while FUE is a broader extraction approach widely used for many patterns of hair loss. The better choice depends on the case, not the marketing label.

Yes, selected women can be candidates, especially in stable female pattern hair loss or selected traction/scar cases. The cause of hair loss must be diagnosed first because diffuse shedding and autoimmune conditions may need medical treatment instead.

Possibly. Younger patients often continue to lose hair, which can make an early transplant age poorly if the hairline is designed too aggressively or the donor area is used too heavily. Ideally, the pattern should be stable and medically assessed before surgery.

Yes. The transplant does not stop future loss in your native, non-transplanted hair. That is why some patients still need medical therapy and long-term follow-up.

In many cases, yes, but correction depends on donor reserves, scar quality, hairline design, and what went wrong originally. Repair cases often require a more conservative strategy.

Some scarring is expected with any transplant. FUE usually leaves many tiny scars, while FUT leaves a linear scar at the donor site. Visibility depends on healing, technique, and haircut length.

At Marina Clinic, hair transplant planning should be based on diagnosis first, not only graft numbers. The right approach starts with understanding the cause of hair loss, assessing donor capacity, selecting the most suitable technique, and designing a natural hairline that still looks right over time.

Why Choose Marina Clinic for Hair Transplant in Turkey?

At Marina Clinic, hair transplant planning should be based on diagnosis first, not only graft numbers. The right approach starts with understanding the cause of hair loss, assessing donor capacity, selecting the most suitable technique, and designing a natural hairline that still looks right over time.

Book Your Hair Analysis

If you are noticing recession, thinning, patchy loss, or a weak hairline, the first step is a professional analysis. A proper consultation can determine:

  • the cause of hair loss
  • whether you are a good transplant candidate
  • the most suitable technique
  • the likely graft range
  • whether treatment should be done in one session or more
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