Non-surgical treatment fits patients in early-stage loss, patients who are not yet surgical candidates, and as ongoing maintenance for patients who have had surgery. The honest version: these treatments slow progression and, in some cases, partially maintain or improve density. They do not regrow significant hair in areas where the follicles have already miniaturised past the point of meaningful function.
Finasteride (oral). The most studied and effective medication for pattern hair loss. It blocks DHT at the follicle level, slowing or halting miniaturisation. Six to twelve months to show measurable effect. The side effect profile is real but statistically small. The literature is available and worth reading before you decide. Detailed walkthrough on the finasteride page.
Minoxidil (topical or oral). Over-the-counter, widely used. It mainly maintains existing hair and supports follicle health. Works best paired with finasteride. Requires ongoing use. Stop, and any benefit reverses within months.
PRP (platelet-rich plasma). Modest evidence in the right candidate. Not a standalone solution. Reasonable as an add-on for some patients, not as a primary treatment. Evidence review on the PRP page.
Low-level laser therapy (LLLT). Some evidence for maintenance, weak evidence for regrowth. Reasonable as an adjunct with low downside risk.
What does not work. Scalp serums marketed as DHT blockers. DHT-blocking shampoos. Biotin supplements (unless you are actually deficient). Most topical products that claim to restore hair. The evidence simply is not there, regardless of marketing budget.
Surgery fits patients with established, stable loss and adequate donor supply. It is a permanent solution for the area treated. Donor hair from the back and sides of the scalp keeps its DHT-resistance after transplantation, and those hairs grow for life in their new location.
What surgery does not do: stop ongoing loss in the native hair around the transplanted area. A patient who has surgery at thirty and continues to lose native hair through their thirties ends up with an island of transplanted hair in a sea of continued loss, unless that ongoing loss is being actively managed with medication. Planning a surgical case without a plan for ongoing loss is a common and avoidable mistake.
The combination approach (surgery for what has already gone, medication to protect what remains) is how most patients with progressive pattern loss should be thinking about long-term hair management.
For Kitchener-Waterloo patients, the surgical clinic is in Oakville, about seventy minutes away on Highway 401 east. The procedure is a single day. Most patients are home by evening.
Some patients are clear surgical candidates. Stable loss, adequate donor, realistic expectations. Others belong firmly in the non-surgical lane. Early stage, still responding to medication, or not yet candidates for surgery for other reasons. Most patients sit somewhere in the middle, and the right starting point comes from an honest look at their specific situation.
The assessment process here does not push toward surgery. If non-surgical management is the right starting point for your case, that is the recommendation you will receive. The goal is a plan that fits your case, not a plan that generates a procedure for the clinic.
For Kitchener-Waterloo patients, the first step is photos. No drive to Oakville at this stage. Dr. Jones reviews personally and replies in writing within forty-eight hours with a frank assessment of where you stand and what the path forward looks like for your situation specifically.
Photos tell most of the story. Send yours and Dr. Jones replies in writing within forty-eight hours with the path that fits your case.