"This is a change you can make today that will last you the rest of your life."
A surgeon by trade, Dr. Keith Durante completed a micro-vascular fellowship under world-renowned Dr. Lester R. Sauvage after completing a traditional five-year general surgery residency in New York City. Shortly thereafter, major advances in healthcare technology opened a new world of possibilities in hair restoration.
New technology in hair transplantation arrived that enabled Dr. Keith, a highly trained surgeon, to use an automated follicular extraction technique for hair restoration. This was a game changer, and with a background in microsurgery, allowed Dr. Keith to seamlessly transition to becoming the leading hair restoration surgeon he is today.
It isn’t enough to simply treat hair loss as a singular condition. More often hair loss is a symptom of underlying condition. To really help a patient and restore hair, it is essential to identify the cause of hair loss, and take a multi-therapeutic, personalized approach to hair rejuvenation.
Surgical Precision
Dr. Durante's surgical precision allows him to perform intricate work so patient results are natural and last forever.
After carefully examining the physiological causes, patients may also receive a hair transplant, a minimally invasive technique to eliminate alopecia.
Dr. Durante uses the “state-of-art” Automated Follicular Extraction technique to perform, a natural single hair transplant, with no bleeding, pain, or scars. There is minimal downtime and patients can return to work in a several days.
Many patients see dramatic results and hair regrowth through non-invasive therapies.
Brad from Michigan
I consider meeting Dr. Keith Durante one of the luckier days of my life. Through a chance meeting on a back country ski trip, I became acquainted with Dr. Durante. Upon learning that he is one of the foremost authorities in the world on hair loss, I began asking him a number of questions. I had always been embarrassed by my hair loss, but Dr. Durante made having these conversations and asking these questions very easy and normal.
That’s what Patricia Baribault, of Nesconset, said she was told by the neurosurgeon after her son, Nassau police Officer Kenneth Baribault, was hit by a drunken driver as he sat in his cruiser on May 18, 2008. He had been questioning another drunken-driving suspect on the side of the Long Island Expressway.