MINIMALLY INVASIVE. REGENERATIVE.
Stem Cells.
Harness your body's innate healing potential with stem cell therapy, a pillar of regenerative medicine.
Stem cells are the building blocks of the body and have the ability to differentiate into different cell types to promote healing and growth. Because stem cells are capable of morphing into any cell type, they are both the building blocks and the repair mechanisms of your body.
“Stem cell therapy in Florida” is performed by harvesting and delivering the patient’s stem cells to stimulate the body to repair and replace damaged tissue in any joint, spine, or soft tissue structures – such as knees, shoulders, hips, wrists, ankles, elbows, vertebral discs, tendons, ligaments, and non-healing bone fractures.
When introduced into an area of injury or disease, stem cells activate the healing process, continuously fostering healthier cell development. By signaling the body to begin production of newer and younger tissue, many injuries and conditions can be healed and potentially reversed.
Experience the future of Regenerative Medicine with stem cell therapy,
a pathway to enhanced wellness and a testament to the human body's resilience.
What is Stem Cell Therapy?
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Or call us at (305) 699-6963
Is Stem Cell Therapy for you?
Conditions Treated
As the best in class regenerative medicine practice in South Florida, our concierge service with double-board certified physicians use evidence-based therapies coupled with personalized treatments to meet your needs.
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• Osteoarthritis, joint degeneration
• Tendinitis / Tendinosis / Tendinopathy
• Bursitis and capsulitis
• Shoulder rotator cuff sprains and tears
• Knee ligament and meniscus injury, (ACL, LCL, MCL sprains and tears)
• Tennis or Golfer’s elbow (lateral and medial epicondylitis)
• Hip labral tears
• Ankle sprain and instability
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• Cervical and Lumbar
◦ Radiculitis / Radiculopathy
◦ Herniated discs
◦ Degenerative disc disease
◦ Sciatica and nerve impingement
• Cervical, thoracic, lumbar spine joint arthritis
◦ Spondylolysis
◦ Facet arthropathy, hypertrophy
◦ Faceto-ligamentous capsulitis / sprain
• Spine instability due to muscle and ligament damage
◦ Anterolisthesis, retrolisthesis
◦ Spondylolisthesis
• Sacroiliac (SI) joint dysfunction
◦ Sacroiliitis
◦ SI joint arthritis
◦ SI joint instability
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• Facial
◦ Facial rejuvenation
◦ Wrinkles, fine lines
◦ Skin tightening / plumping
◦ Enhanced skin tone and texture
◦ Moisture retention
• Dermatitis
• Rosacea
• Acne and scarring
• Hyperpigmentation
• Hair rejuvenation
We offer stem cell banking, too.
Secure your future health with stem cell banking, a state-of-the-art preservation method that stores your vital stem cells for potential future use. From treating degenerative diseases to regenerative therapies, learn how banking your stem cells can provide a lifeline for medical treatments, ensuring you have access to personalized healing solutions tailored to your unique health needs.
FAQs
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Stem cells help to create new cells in existing healthy tissues, and may help repair tissues in areas that are injured or damaged. They are the basis for the specific cell types that make up each organ in the body. Stem cells are distinguished from other cells by a few important characteristics: they have the ability to self-renew; they have the ability to divide for a long period of time; and, under certain conditions, they can be induced to differentiate into specialized cells with distinct functions (phenotypes) including, but not limited to, cardiac cells, liver cells, fat cells, bone cells, cartilage cells, nerve cells, and connective tissue cells. The ability of cells to differentiate into a variety of other cells is termed multipotency. What scientists learn about controlling stem cell differentiation can become the basis for new treatments of many serious diseases and injuries.
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Stem cells can be derived from various sources, including adult tissues (such as bone marrow and adipose tissue), embryos, and umbilical cord blood. Adult stem cells, also known as tissue-specific stem cells, are found in specific tissues and are generally difficult to grow and expand in the laboratory. Hematopoietic or blood-forming stem cells in the bone marrow, for example, only make up one in a hundred thousand cells of the bone marrow but can be isolated and used in treatments like bone marrow transplants.
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"Stem cell therapy” more accurately termed as “cell-based therapies” since the procedures we use do not have “true stem cells” that can differentiate into any tissue, has been under intensive study for the last few decades. Virtually every field of medicine is exploring its use. Essentially, we are harnessing the power of cells – the “building blocks” of all the cells in your body – to regenerate and repair tissue. This field of medicine – regenerative medicine – is revolutionary. Instead of giving you a foreign chemical (i.e. medication) or putting in a plastic-and-metal joint replacement, we are utilizing your body’s fundamental repair mechanisms and directing them to the site that needs the most attention. It is perhaps one of the most “natural” treatments we can provide in Medicine.
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Stem cells work to reduce pain and heal injuries by differentiating into the specialized cells required for repairing damaged tissues. This process involves identifying, isolating, and growing the right kind of stem cell, then developing the right conditions so that the cells differentiate into the specialized cells needed for a particular treatment. This approach aims to replace diseased cells with healthy ones, a process similar to organ transplantation but with cells instead of organs.
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Stem cell treatments that are FDA-approved or being studied under an Investigational New Drug Application (IND) are considered legal and have undergone rigorous testing for safety and efficacy. However, many stem cell treatments offered by clinics worldwide are unproven and unregulated, posing significant safety risks to patients. The FDA has taken action against unapproved stem cell products and clinics offering such treatments. The scientific literature supports the potential of stem cells in treating a wide range of conditions, but also emphasizes the need for further research to establish their safety and effectiveness.
The FDA has established a division to regulate blood products, known as the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. Under regulation 21 CFR 1271.15(b), treatment using a patient’s own blood products is allowed by the FDA. Numerous devices that prepare PRP have been FDA cleared. Cell therapy, if utilizing a patient’s own cells, and if those cells are “minimally manipulated” is also allowed by the FDA. The FDA still considers these treatments to be investigational.