Hair Replacement in Curitiba BR
It is the most popular plastic surgery among men. Prior to deciding on a procedure it is important to rule out other reasons for hair loss. Those include hormonal imbalance, undiagnosed disease or recent trauma to the area. To make the replacement the surgeon uses the hair around the head, behind the ears and on the neck, therefore, the ideal candidates for this procedure are people with thick hair in those places.
This procedure can be performed using the following methods:
Skin implants with hair - this is the most common and easiest technique. Small pieces of skin (diameter 4-4.5m"m) are taken from the neck, each containing 10-15 hair follicles and implanted into hole at desired location. Afterwards the area is bandaged for 24-48 hours. The new hair does not grow right away, it usually takes 3-4 month. The donor site usually recovers after 10 days. Although the implants leave scars in the donor site those are very small (pin point) and usually covered completely with hair around them. If the area needs to be covered is too large, the surgeon creates a front line hair that can be combed back worth to cover the boldness. The implants cannot be placed too close to each other, because each of them needs blood supply from the area around to create hair. Therefore, usually 2-4 treatments required, to complete the treatment. Each one lasts from 6 month to year. This procedure usually done using local anesthetics and it lasts for an hour.
Skin flaps - this method uses long bands of hairy skin taken from around the head to the bold areas. The flat is moved with its own blood supply. This method can create unnatural hairline requiring additional implant to cover the scars on the sides.
Scalp reduction using skin expanders - the surgeon can minimize the boldness by removing some of the scalp skin using tissue expanders. An expander is put under the skin and inflated gradually. The extra skin is removed and closed. This technique requires two operations and takes more time.
Every operation has its ricks. An infection can occur, the implant may not "take" and bleeding may occur.
After the surgery you should avoid vigorous activities at least a three weeks. You'll be able to go to work after several days. The implants may fall off after 6 weeks, this is normal. It'll take another 5-6 weeks for the hair to grow.
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Feira do Largo da Ordem (Largo da Ordem's Street Fair) it is an open market , happens on all sunday mornings , there you can find craftmanship , paintings , sculptures , typical foods , street artists , old car exhibition and a lot more .To have a better idea here is a link to a blog with photos of the feirinha: http://feirinhadolargodaordem.blogspot.com
Feira da pra?a da Espanha (Spain Square's Fair) it is a trade of antiquities, placed at the Spain square. -
Curitiba By train
Due to brazilian government decision on not providing passenger train services anymore, Curitiba is no longer serviced by scheduled passenger train sevice. However, there is a touristic train route that goes to Paran? State's ocean coast, reaching its end in Paranagu?. It is definitely a worth ride for those willing to see natural and Atlantic Forrest scened, with lots of waterfalls, cliffs, peaks and historic sites.
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Plastic Surgery News...
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- According to a meta-analysis, antibiotics have a marginal effect on the development of asymptomatic middle ear effusion (MEE) in children with acute otitis media (AOM), therefore in view of the known negative effects of prescribing antibiotics, such as the development of antibiotic resistance and adverse effects, they should not be prescribed to prevent MEE.
A trial was included in the meta-analysis if treatments were randomised, children aged 0 to 12 years with AOM were included, the comparison was between antibiotic therapy and placebo or no (antibiotic) treatment, and MEE at 1 month was measured. Overall, 5 RCTs (n = 1328 children aged 6 months to 12 years) met the inclusion critieria. The researchers reported that there was no statistically significant overall effect of antibiotic therapy in preventing the development of asymptomatic MEE at 1 month (p = 0.19) and independent predictors of the development of asymptomatic MEE were age < 2 years and recurrent AOM. They call for more research to identify relevant subgroups of children who have MEE that might benefit from other treatments.