Stem Cell Therapy: A Promising Option for Treating Joint Pain
BY DR. DAVID GREENEAt the point when you have joint pain, life can be hopeless. Walking up and down the stairs can be a task, or taking the lid off a container appears to be a massive task. Surprisingly the thought of going to bed will offer no comfort since you know you will turn and toss with an end goal to get comfortable and settle in.
Regardless of whether you have arthritis, stressed muscles, aggravation of the tendons, or sprains and tears of the delicate tissue, joint pain can upset your life. There are medications that briefly relieve your joint pain, both over-the-counter and prescription.
But there is an effective procedure that has shown some achievement in the supervision and healing of joint pain and injuries to delicate tissue.
Dr. David Greene believes that stem cell treatment will change how we deal with medical problems. In the treatment, healthy stem cells are taken, either from you or a donor Then injected them directly into the affected region. Stem cells then develop into specialized cells depending on the affected area of the body.
The cells regrow sound tissue or bone to permit your joints to heal. Patients have announced that muscle injury, tendonitis, osteoarthritis, and soft tissue pain have facilitated or vanished after stem cell therapy.
Heal Joint Pain With Stem Cell Therapy
Muscle massages and surprisingly physical therapy might assist with mitigating some part of the joint pain, and sometimes surgery is an alternative. But still, most who suffer joint pain after treatment will have to figure out how to live with it.
You are presumably thinking exactly about how regenerative stem cell therapy can assist with facilitating your joint pain.
Dr. David Greene, as an expert discusses his view on what makes regenerative therapy promising to assist with joint pain. The stem cells vital to construct specialized cells that heal your joints come from adult bone marrow or fat. These stem cells remake structural cells in the body like cartilage, ligaments, tendons, and surprisingly bone too.
When harvested from you or a donor, stem cells are injected into the joint, like the elbow, shoulder, or knee. The cells then, at that point, start attempting to heal your harmed joint. In osteoarthritis, researchers believe stem cells are effective for creating cartilage cells. Also, deliver proteins that diminish pain and slow the degeneration of cartilage.