Recreating The Crown Whorl
By Robert
H. True, MD
A great hair transplant can accomplished
when the surgeon is able to appreciate and reproduce
the subtle variations in the architecture of the hair
on different parts of the scalp. Appropriately, much
has been written about reconstruction of the hairline
zone, as it is widely appreciated that this is critical
to achieving a "natural" result. Although
written about much less frequently, reconstruction of
the crown whorl is of nearly equal cosmetic importance.
All people naturally have a whorl or cowlick in their
hair on the crown of the head. The whorl is usually
located off center to the right side, however there
are many variations in location and some people even
have two whorls.
The whorl is a spiral in which the hair direction changes
360°. The hair on the front of the scalp is generally
oriented forward. The hair direction begins to turn
toward one side on the mid portion of the scalp, and
on the back (tonsure) the hair faces toward the rear.
The whorl is the center of this critical change in hair
direction. Its spiral actually extends to involve the
majority of the crown of the scalp. For most patients
the whorl is actually 4 to 5 inches in diameter.
Not only does the hair change direction 360° in
the whorl, the angle at which the hair emerges from
the scalp decreases. Thus, the hair does not stand straight
up in the center. Rather, it lays flat along the curved
contour of the crown. In some ways, reproducing the
correct spiral angle while at the same time creating
the appropriate "flatness" angle is more technically
demanding for the surgeon than a hairline
Recreating the whorl is essential to treating crown
baldness. A well constructed whorl is as much a credit
to the surgeon's art as an elegant hairline. Both must
be approached with equal finesse and have comparable
cosmetic value.
The center of the whorl requires single hairs just like
edge of the hairline. The receptor sites must properly
rotate in the spiral and be properly angled across the
curve of the scalp to make the hairs lie flat to the
scalp.
Because it is rarely possible to reproduce high density
in a crown restoration, it is critical to use only microscopically
prepared single follicular unit grafts. Thus with lower
density there will be no "plugginess" or unnatural
appearance.
Some transplant surgeons will not treat the crown, arguing
that the limited donor supply is best focused on the
front. However, this is a necessity only for patients
with an exceptionally limited donor supply. Most patients
with advanced Class 5A to 6 baldness do have sufficient
supply to treat some or the entire crown as long as
the whorl is reconstructed. The whorl is necessary to
produce the layering effect of hair upon hair required
for cosmetic coverage.
The crown should not be treated without rebuilding
the whorl. To do so would be like restoring the front
without a hairline. I also believe that in cases where
the doctor and patient make the decision to treat the
front part of the balding pattern only, the result will
look much better from the rear when the restoration
has been carried back far enough that it includes the
upper half of the whorl. When this is achieved, the
hair drapes much better onto the crown.
Since the mid 1990's scalp reduction has fallen out
of favor with hair transplant surgeons. One of the major
problems with scalp reductions is that they change the
hair direction in the crown, making the hair fall away
from the middle of the crown. In other words, they eliminate
the whorl. Moreover, it was very difficult to successfully
recreate a whorl with transplants once reductions had
been done. The center could not be placed in the correct
location and the hair direction could not be matched
to the remaining native hair on the margin of the scalp
reduction.
Without scalp reductions, the size of the area remains
large. However, because the native hair direction is
reproduced in a carefully reconstructed whorl the cosmetic
result is more natural and the coverage is comparable.
The decision about where to put the hair is one that
needs to be explored thoroughly with each patient, It
is possible to use up all of the donor hair in creating
a very thick frontal restoration. At the other end of
the spectrum the hair can be evenly distributed throughout
the entire balding area in low to moderate density.
Another choice is to treat the entire scalp, but place
greater density in the front and top, lesser to the
crown.
Special care must be taken when treating a young patient
whose crown is just beginning to thin in the center.
Further treatment will be needed as the balding progresses.
Control can often be achieved with Propecia® and/or
minoxidil preparations. However, even in these cases
the surgeon has to anticipate future needs and make
sure that an appropriate amount of the donor supply
is retained to complete the crown restoration.
While some patients may choose partial restoration
focused on the front and top only, those who want full
head coverage or those who want the back edge of their
frontal restoration to look natural, may achieve their
goal in the hands of a transplant surgeon skilled in
whorl reconstruction.<
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