Guides

Dislodged Hair Transplant Grafts: How to Tell (The Bleeding Test)

A genuinely dislodged graft almost always announces itself with active bleeding at the site — the graft sits in a vascular wound, and pulling it out reopens it. A hair found on your pillow or in the drain, even with a white bulb attached, is a shed shaft: normal from week 2 onward. Grafts are vulnerable for roughly the first 10 days and effectively immovable after day 10–14.

The bleeding test

Because each graft occupies a fresh, blood-rich channel, avulsing one reopens the wound: you would see a spot of active bleeding at the site, often with a small piece of pale tissue attached to the lost hair. No blood, no lost graft — that is the rule of thumb clinics repeat all week one.

If you do see bleeding after contact: apply gentle pressure beside (not on) the site with clean gauze, note the location, and message your clinic with a photo. One graft among thousands does not change a result, but they will want to know.

Shed shaft vs lost graft

When grafts are actually secure

Grafts are held by clot and early healing tissue at first, gaining real anchorage day by day: significant risk in days 0–5, low risk days 6–9, and effectively zero after day 10–14 — studies of graft adherence show they resist firm direct traction by then. This is the timeline behind every hat, helmet, and haircut rule in post-op care.

If you bumped your head

Car doorframes, cabinet corners, and toddlers find every fresh transplant. After a knock: check the mirror for bleeding at the recipient area. None? You are fine — pressure without shear rarely moves a graft even in week one. Bleeding, a divot, or a loose tissue plug: photo to your clinic the same day.

Frequently asked questions

I found hairs in the drain on day 12 — did I lose grafts?

No — day 12 is the front edge of shock-loss shedding, and washing carries shed shafts to the drain. By day 12 grafts are anchored; hair in the drain is the recovery script playing out.

Can scratching in my sleep dislodge grafts?

In the first few nights, aggressive scratching could — which is why itching relief matters early. After day 10, sleep-scratching can irritate skin and lift scabs but will not remove a graft.

Does losing one graft matter?

Cosmetically, no — a session places hundreds to thousands of grafts, and results do not hinge on any single one. It matters only as information for your clinic if it signals a care problem in week one.

Related reading

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Last updated 2026-07-11. General educational information — not medical advice. Always follow your surgeon's specific instructions.