Mmmm, but the hair on your body is different to the hair on your head. Might look a bit odd. Don't see why you couldn't though. Hair grafts work by cutting out individual follicles from dense areas on the head and then reimplanting them in sparser areas.
I shall do an experiment. Next time I shed a follicle I shall attach it to my forehead and see what happens.
Or even better, one could clone head hair then just scatter it about the bald bits and wait for it to "take".
"there is nothing misogynistic about anything, stop trippin.
i type this way because im black and from nyc chill son "
Only assuming there isn't some underlying chemical condition in the scalp that caused the hair loss in the first place.
If one could find a way to stimulate embryonic stem cells to differentiate into hair follicles....say by cloning a human skin cell inside an enucleated animal embryo to create a source of human stem cells, then that is something that would be very possible. I think having a bit more hair would be worth it.
According to my research hair on the back of the head isn't as prone to falling out as the stuff atop because it doesn't respond to the hormones that make it fall out...that's why hair in denser areas is used to fill out bald patches. Once it's transplanted it stays where it is.
Are you saying I'm dense
Not right now, but I'm sure I have in the past .
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