Stem Cell Therapy Uses Patient’s Own Cells
Stem Cell Therapy Supports Regeneration by Using the Body’s Own Cellular Repair System
Stem cell therapy is used when tissue injury, chronic degeneration, or age-related decline limits the body’s normal recovery processes. By delivering concentrated populations of viable stem cells directly into joints, tendons and ligaments, treatment may support collagen remodeling, reduce inflammatory signaling, and encourage more complete tissue repair.
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Adipose as a Preferred Stem Cell Source
Stem cell therapy at our clinic uses adipose tissue as the primary source. Adipose-derived cells replicate on a slower cycle—approximately every seven to ten years—compared to bone marrow cells, which replicate every 90-120 days.
Biologically, this slower replication means adipose-derived cells tend to behave younger, are smaller, and more responsive, which may support tissue healing more effectively. This also makes adipose-derived stem cells a viable option even for patients over age 60.
How Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Are Collected and Prepared
Stem cell therapy begins with lipoaspiration, a minimally invasive procedure performed in clinic to remove a small sample of adipose tissue.
They are then minimally manipulated in our laboratory to be processed into MFAT (Microfragmented Adipose Tissue) and can then be combined with PRP and injected under US guidance.
In appropriate cases sample can be sent to a certified, FDA-regulated laboratory, where:
1. Stem cells are isolated from adipose tissue
2. Cells may be expanded to increase total cell volume when clinically indicated
3. The expanded cells are prepared for injection.
The expansion process typically requires approximately six weeks before treatment can be performed.
