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Explore insights into world-class healthcare and the beauty of Türkiye. From expert tips on treatments to travel guides, our articles are your companion on the journey to wellness and discovery.
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Regenera Activa: The stem-cell boost your hair transplant needs.
Regenera Activa is a non-surgical treatment that uses a small sample of your own scalp tissue to create a cell-rich solution, which is then injected into areas of thinning hair. It is often discussed alongside hair transplantation because the goal is different: a transplant moves healthy follicles, while Regenera Activa aims to support existing miniaturizing hairs and improve scalp conditions around them.
For some people, that makes it a useful add-on rather than a replacement. It may be offered before a transplant to stabilize ongoing hair loss, or after a transplant to support the appearance of native hair around the grafted area. Results vary, and the treatment is generally considered most suitable for early to moderate androgenetic hair loss rather than advanced baldness.
Natural-Looking Eyebrows: How to restore your brows permanently
Eyebrows frame the eyes, shape facial expression, and help balance the face. When brows become thin from overplucking, aging, scarring, or certain medical conditions, many people want a result that looks natural rather than sharply drawn on. Permanent eyebrow restoration usually means moving your own hair into the brow area with a hair transplant. When it is planned carefully, this can create fuller brows that grow, can be trimmed, and are designed to match your features.
This FAQ explains how permanent eyebrow restoration works, who may be a good candidate, what results to expect, and why the skill of the surgeon matters so much. It also covers limits, recovery, and the importance of checking for medical causes of eyebrow loss before treatment.
Manual vs. Micromotor: Does the tool used for extraction change the final result?
In hair transplantation, grafts can be removed with a manual punch or with a motorized micromotor punch. Patients often assume the device itself determines the outcome, but the final result depends far more on planning, surgeon skill, graft handling, and whether the chosen punch matches the hair and scalp characteristics. In other words, the tool matters, but technique matters more.
Both methods are used in follicular unit extraction, or FUE. A manual punch is advanced by hand, while a micromotor rotates or oscillates the punch with mechanical assistance. Each approach has strengths and trade-offs in speed, control, and tissue handling. The key question is not which tool sounds more advanced, but which method is most appropriate for the individual case and is used well.