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What Equipment Is Needed for PRP Hair Treatments?

What equipment and supplies does a clinic need to offer PRP hair treatments?

Everything you’ll buy for a PRP hair service sorts into three jobs: drawing the patient’s blood, concentrating the platelets, and putting that plasma back into the scalp. Get those three covered well and the rest is supporting cast. The centrifuge is your one big capital decision, and the single-use kit you open for every patient is the number that quietly decides your margin.

Centrifuge: programmable, roughly 1,000 to 3,000 g
Draw kit: per-patient separation tubes, needles, anticoagulant
Delivery: 27 to 30 gauge needles, 1 to 3 mL syringes
Infection control: sharps containers, biohazard bags, PPE
Capital: several thousand to well over $10,000
Expert Summary

A PRP hair setup rests on three core functions, and its costs split between a one-time capital outlay of several thousand to well over ten thousand dollars and a recurring per-treatment consumable cost that drives the service’s margin.

What kind of centrifuge is required to separate platelet-rich plasma for hair treatments?

The centrifuge is the heart of the whole setup, because it’s the one device that actually concentrates the platelets, and if its spin is wrong your plasma won’t carry a therapeutic platelet count. You’re aiming for the soft-tissue PRP force window, which lands you on a few thousand RPM, but the smarter question is whether you’ll run a single spin or a double spin, because that decides how much machine you need to buy.

  • Force window: Around 1,000 to 1,500 g for a soft spin, up to roughly 3,000 g for a harder concentration spin.
  • Protocol drives the buy: Single-spin needs a basic timer-and-speed unit; double-spin justifies a programmable model with stored presets.
  • Rotor type: Swing-bucket gives a flatter, cleaner separation that’s easier to draw from; fixed-angle is compact but leaves an angled interface.
  • Safety routine: Recognized electrical and lab certification, plus periodic calibration and rotor inspection for cracks.
Technical Verdict

A clinical PRP centrifuge must reach roughly 1,000 to 3,000 g, and a matched centrifuge-and-kit pair is often preferred because the manufacturer has validated the spin program against its own tubes.

What disposable PRP preparation kits and blood collection supplies are needed for each treatment?

Every session burns a fresh set of single-use supplies, and the star of that set is the separation kit, which packages the special tubes and additives that turn a blood draw into usable plasma. Here’s the part that bites you on price: you buy that kit new for every single patient, so its unit cost is the dominant driver of what each treatment costs you to run.

  1. Open the separation kit: Vacuum collection tubes pre-loaded with anticoagulant, sometimes a separator gel, transfer devices, and harvest syringes.
  2. Set up phlebotomy supplies: A butterfly or straight needle, tourniquet, antiseptic prep, gauze, and an adhesive dressing, all sterile and single use.
  3. Pick the anticoagulant: A citrate-based solution like sodium citrate or ACD-A preserves platelet function without activating the platelets too early.
  4. Draw to the target volume: Most scalp protocols collect somewhere in the 10 to 60 mL range, scaled to treatment area and concentration sought.
Pro Tip

Closed-system kits keep blood within a sealed sterile pathway from draw to injection and cut contamination risk, while open tube methods cost less per patient but demand more manual transfers under aseptic technique.

Which needles, syringes, and injection devices are used to deliver PRP into the scalp?

Putting the finished plasma into the scalp is its own little toolkit, and these choices shape both how comfortable the patient is and how evenly the product lands. What most people underestimate is the volume of injection points, which is exactly why a lot of clinics reach for a device to keep hundreds of pricks consistent instead of going fully freehand.

ToolManual injectionDevice-assisted
Needle gauge27 to 30 gauge, 4 to 13 mmPreset depth per trigger
Syringe size1 to 3 mL for precise aliquotsPreset volume per pull
Best forHands-on controlRepeatable uniformity across many points
Alternative pathDirect intradermal injectionMicroneedling pen or dermaroller, plasma applied topically
Critical Insight

Scalp delivery uses fine 27 to 30 gauge needles and small 1 to 3 mL syringes, and the choice between careful manual injection and a mesotherapy gun comes down to hands-on control versus the repeatable uniformity a device provides.

What anesthesia and patient comfort supplies are needed during a scalp PRP session?

A scalp PRP session is minimally invasive, but the sheer number of injection points makes comfort supplies a real part of the kit, and topical numbing cream is the workhorse. Match the comfort plan to the patient in front of you, because a sensitive patient or a large treatment field calls for more than cream alone.

Standard sensitivity: Apply a lidocaine-based numbing cream, sometimes with prilocaine or tetracaine, 20 to 45 minutes ahead under occlusion.
Highly sensitive or large field: Step up to a ring block around the scalp or a nerve block targeting the supraorbital, supratrochlear, or occipital nerves.
Needs extra dulling at the point: Add a cold pack or chilling roller, plus a small vibration device that exploits the gate-control principle to mask the prick.
Safety Note

Anesthetics carry total-dose limits to avoid systemic toxicity and have contraindications like known allergy or certain cardiac conditions, so the clinic must track cumulative dosing and screen patients before applying them.

What sterilization, infection control, and biohazard handling equipment must be in place?

PRP is fundamentally the handling of a patient’s own blood, so infection control isn’t a side concern, it’s the regulatory and clinical baseline that shapes your whole setup. Don’t treat any of this as optional, because an exposure incident or a contamination event is the kind of setback that can shut a service down.

  • Sharps and waste: Puncture-resistant sharps containers and color-coded biohazard bags, paired with a contracted medical waste disposal service.
  • PPE: Gloves at minimum, typically gowns or aprons, eye protection, and masks for splash and aerosol risk.
  • Autoclave, if needed: Only required if you use reusable metal instruments; an all single-use practice can skip steam sterilization entirely.
  • Exposure planning: A blood spill kit and a documented needlestick and exposure protocol in place before the first patient.
Authority Warning

The strongest single lever for cutting the whole infection-control burden is a closed-system kit, which keeps blood within a sealed sterile path from draw to delivery and minimizes the open transfers where contamination is most likely.

What treatment room furniture and clinical infrastructure support a PRP hair service?

The room around the procedure is easy to underrate, but the right furniture and layout are the difference between a smooth session and a cramped, awkward one. Think about your own reach: you’ll be working the crown, hairline, and occipital regions in one sitting, so the patient’s position and your supply layout decide whether the visit flows.

  • Procedure chair or table: Reclines and tilts so you can reach every scalp region, with adjustable height and a stable headrest.
  • Task lighting and magnification: Bright, shadow-free light over the scalp, plus a loupe or dermatoscope for assessing follicular density.
  • Mobile cart or countertop: Keeps the centrifuge, kit, prepared syringes, and sharps container within arm’s reach in order of use.
  • Sink and footprint: Reliable clinical handwashing access, with enough bench space that a standard treatment room handles draw, spin, and injection.
Expert Note

A PRP hair service fits comfortably in a standard treatment room rather than a dedicated lab, since the draw, the spin, and the injection all happen in one visit and the plasma is used fresh.

What regulatory and quality standards govern the devices and consumables used for PRP?

Regulation cuts across every item on the list, because PRP sits where medical devices, blood handling, and scope-of-practice law all meet, and a clinic that ignores it is taking on real liability. The trap most people fall into is assuming a device sold abroad is fine to use locally, so confirm that what you buy actually holds the right authorization for your region.

  • Device classification: The centrifuge and especially the separation kit are regulated as medical devices; confirm region-appropriate clearance or marking before buying.
  • Scope of practice: Local law dictates who may draw blood and inject, and whether delegation or supervision rules apply.
  • Minimal manipulation: Plasma prep must stay within what regulators treat as minimal handling, or it risks reclassification as a more heavily regulated biologic.
  • Traceability and licensing: Consumables carry labeling and lot-tracking requirements, and the facility itself may need licensing to offer injectables.
The Bottom Line

In many places PRP for hair loss is delivered using cleared devices in an off-label or evolving regulatory context, so practitioners must stay current with national and regional authorities rather than treating the rules as settled.

What is the startup and per-treatment cost of equipping a clinic for PRP hair therapy?

The money splits cleanly into a one-time capital outlay and a recurring per-treatment cost, and understanding that split is what makes your price defensible and your service profitable. The centrifuge dominates the upfront number, but the single-use kit is what you pay over and over, so watch how a vendor balances those two against each other.

Cost lineCapital (one-time)Per-treatment (recurring)
CentrifugeA few hundred to well into five figuresNot applicable
Separation kitNot applicableTens of dollars open, $100+ closed proprietary
Durable extrasChair, lighting, imaging, mesotherapy gunNot applicable
Small consumablesNot applicablePhlebotomy, anesthetic, sharps disposal
Financial Verdict

Proprietary systems often lower the centrifuge price but lock the clinic into higher per-kit pricing, so a sustainable per-session fee must cover the consumable, a share of capital recovery, staff time, and a healthy margin.

Will Lawson

Written by Will Lawson
Medical Affairs Manager
Will Lawson is the Medical Affairs Manager at BTR PRP, a U.S.-based provider of FDA-cleared Class II PRP kits for medical and aesthetic practices. He focuses on helping clinics lower cost-per-procedure through smarter product selection, clear patient education, and alignment with current best practices and regulatory standards in PRP therapy.