2005
DOI: 10.33589/15.4.0113
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Trichophytic Closure of the Donor Area

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Cited by 53 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…With the help of an endoscope, the operator was able to obtain good surgical exposure and lower the risk of scalp denervation. Additionally, the incision scars could be camouflaged by the trichophytic incision, which was first introduced by Marzola [6] in 2005.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…With the help of an endoscope, the operator was able to obtain good surgical exposure and lower the risk of scalp denervation. Additionally, the incision scars could be camouflaged by the trichophytic incision, which was first introduced by Marzola [6] in 2005.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The "trichophytic closure" technique was first introduced by Marzola [6] in 2005. Trichophytic closure allows the growth of hair through the incision scar.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Despite of all precautions and meticulously done suturing the scar used to become visible when patient used to have short hair on the back of the scalp. To overcome this issue a technique of "Trichophytic closer" was introduced by Patric Frechet and Paul Rose as well as Mario Marzolain 2005 [10,11]. In this technique, one of the wound edges was de-epithelialized so that the hair from that edge would grow through the scar tissue and reduce the appearance of the scar at donor site.…”
Section: History From the Lost Pagesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several researchers have reported on the trichophytic technique, which horizontally transects the hair follicles and overlaps the beveled edges to avoid scarring of frontal hairline in a facelift and a flap procedure, since 1976 . In the process of donor harvesting for hair transplantation, trichophytic closure has had positive results in minimizing scarring and camouflaging donor scars effectively; as such, patient anxiety about donor wounds has decreased sharply in recent years . Trichophytic closure is divided into three types: de‐epithelialization techniques of the upper (superior), lower (inferior), and both wound edges.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%