ROBERT V. CATTANI, MD: David, exactly the same criteria subjectively we would use in men and women, except that I've found that, as men are devastated by hair loss, women are even more so. Especially the fact that they feel singled out. They don't feel this is a common thing. They feel that this is highly unusual and the reaction to it is very profound. There are basically, if I could give you categories, there are two categories of women with hair loss. There is the woman as first described by Dr. Reed, that have a hair loss on top of the head alone, with a persistent frontal fringe. Let us call that type one. That type is very correctable surgically.
The second type are those who have diffuse thinning throughout their whole scalp. Those you cannot. Now, of the type one there are three categories and here they are.
DAVID R. MARKS, MD: Go ahead and show us.
ROBERT V. CATTANI, MD: In medicine we have a way of putting labels and names on things. It's just our way of doing things. So about 25 years ago a physician by the name of Ludwig classified baldness as grade one here, two and three, and it's nothing more than extension from a minimal loss to a maximal one. But you know here, in deference to men, that no matter how bald they get, they persist with a frontal line of hair, and that's very advantageous cosmetically when you restore them. So I think the question that you'd want to know are, are women excellent candidates for hair restoration? Yes, they are. Is it very popular? Yes, and I'm sure Dr. Reed wants to talk about that more.
DAVID R. MARKS, MD: Tell me what would make a woman really decide to go ahead and do it as opposed to a woman who's kind of on the fence in your experience?