Percutaneous technique creates individual, needle-like entry points. Anesthesia (± sedation), FUE harvest, and storage are identical. The difference is how sites are formed: precise punctures allow exceptionally fine control over exit angle, rotation, and depth—valuable where hairstyle dynamics matter most, such as temples, whorl zones, or transitions between front and mid-scalp. Percutaneous openings replicate the vector flow of future hairs; the surgeon effectively “draws” growth streamlines into the scalp.
Implantation then proceeds manually. In combination with sapphire, diverse textures can be created: sapphire for linear micro-beds and packing density; percutaneous for zones where slightly varying, natural angles are critical. Donor stewardship remains central: over-packing beyond skin tolerance risks perfusion and results. Aftercare mirrors other systems; gentle washing, mechanical protection, and patience with the biologic cycle are key. Shedding is normal; outcomes mature in phases. If you value particularly natural angulation and soft transitions, percutaneous geometry is often included in a zonal plan.
At a glance
Percutaneous sites are pinpoint, needle-formed openings that reproduce lifelike exit angles.
Step-by-step
- Local anesthesia ± sedation.
- FUE harvest (classic/gold).
- Sorting + hypothermic storage.
- Site-making = Percutaneous (pinpoint entries with controlled angles).
- Manual implantation.
- Aftercare.
When to choose percutaneous?
For natural exit angles and realistic “texture,” frequently combined with sapphire depending on region.
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