Medicinal Signaling Cells (MSCs or Stem Cells) and Exosomes

What are Medicinal Signaling Cells (Stem Cells) and exosomes?

Sometimes called Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Allografts, Human Umbilical Cord Tissue (HUCT) or just stem cells. These are cells derived from donated human umbilical cords and then refined and expanded. The signaling cells are separated and then tested for multiple possible contaminants. Once prepared, they are either injected directly into a problem area of the body or infused through an IV. The cells come bathed in a mixture of natural messaging packets called exosomes. These exosomes contain proteins, rNA and DNA that send messages to neighboring cells to help them function optimally.

How do Medicinal Signaling Cells work?

Science has advanced significantly recently and our understanding of how these cells work is opening new doors. MSCs carry the signaling information necessary to interact with your body’s current cells and ‘messages’ them in a way to assist in your cells to perform the way they need to in order to maintain your body’s natural operating process. Most dysfunction in our bodies is due to our current cells responding to damage or inflammation in an unregulated or dysregulated manner. MSCs and exosomes help your cells do the job they were intended to do in the manner they are supposed to do it.

Will Medicinal Signaling Cells work for me?

We are at the dawn of MSC therapy. Currently, studies indicate benefit in many conditions with MSC therapy.
Some of these conditions include:
– chronic joint pain and osteoarthritis
– soft tissue injuries/muscle tears
– auto-immune diseases such as ulcerative colitis, rheumatoid arthritis,
– after a stroke
– after a heart attack
– Fatigue/malaise

What is the process involved with Medicinal Signaling Cell treatment?

There are two different ways to administer MSCs depending on the condition we are treating. For joint pain and focal musculoskeletal conditions, the MSCs are injected directly into the tissue or the joint. This can be combined with other treatments such as A2M, PRP and viscosity supplementation. The direct injection process takes less than 15 minutes. For conditions that are more systemic or in a location making a direct injection unreasonable, the MSCs are infused through an IV. Most often, the infusion involves a liter of IV fluid and a mix of vitamins. Some of the treatments benefit from some extra steps during the infusion such as giving mannitol to help ‘open’ the blood/brain barrier to allow the cells better access to neuronal tissue. The entire infusion process takes about 90 minutes.

What is the process involved with Medicinal Signaling Cell treatment?

Sources:

Harnessing the potential of mesenchymal stem cells–derived exosomes in degenerative diseases – PMC

These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult with your physician before starting a new medical treatment.

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