In recent years, many medical solutions have appeared to treat hair loss, and the latest trend in this field is the platelet-rich plasma injection technology, how does it work?

For many people, thinner hair problems cause thinning hair, hair loss, and even baldness.

However, with the development of aesthetic medicine, it has become easier to get rid of this by injecting blood plasma, as quoted in a report in Deutsche Welle on the German website MSN.

In an interview conducted by the American "Men's Health" magazine with a plastic surgeon in Hamburg, Jorge Castaneda, about treatment with blood plasma injection, Castaneda said, "The plasma is rich in platelets and stimulates cell regeneration and the restoration of lost components and vitality."

"In the treatment of hair loss, only plasma, that is, the part of blood rich in platelets, is injected into the scalp with the help of fine needles, and specifically in places where there is little hair," he added.

When injecting the scalp with plasma, it renews cells and intensively stimulates growth factors for the tiny blood vessels around the hair roots, so that they are better supplied with nutrients, thus stimulating hair growth.

Mesotherapy

Cosmetic doctor Castaneda explains that he performs the method of micro-injection "mesotherapy", that is, a non-surgical medical beauty treatment, in which it transfers vitamins and minerals to the middle layer of the skin, so that it has the ability to grow new hair and nourish it properly.

But this method is not entirely perfect, because for years who have been completely bald, injecting blood plasma will not be effective for them.

As for those whose hair has become weak somewhere on the head, this method will have an effect on him.

The only condition is that hair should be present, as the growth factors present in the plasma facilitate the movement of blood, transport nutrients and stimulate cell regeneration, Castaneda says.

This plasma injection process is safe, but it may have a number of side complications that vary from one person to another and do not cause concern, such as simple bruising of the skin and infections or irritation of the skin nerves.

As for Castaneda, a plastic surgeon advises avoiding treatment in the event of severe scalp inflammation, infectious diseases and blood clotting disorders.