Stem cell therapy has the potential to help with these common conditions
Stem cells are undifferentiated cells that are capable of giving rise to indefinitely more cells of the same type. They have the remarkable potential to develop into many different cell types in the body and serve as what can be accurately describe as an “internal repair system,” replenishing other cells. Each divided cell has the potential to become another type of cell with a specialized function, such as a muscle cell, a red blood cell, or a brain cell.
Stem Cells go where your body needs them to go and become what your body needs them to become.
Stem cell therapy is the administration of umbilical cord stem cells (UCSC) into a patient’s body based on the recommendation from your medical provider or nurse practitioner. The cells can be administered through injection or IV infusion to maximize the therapy’s reach.
Umbilical Cord Stem Cells are derived exclusively from the umbilical cord tissue of healthy birthed babies & healthy mothers, which is the safest and least-invasive method of extraction available.
Pluripotent A pluripotent cell has the capability of developing into various types of cells or tissues self renewal Stem cells replicate themselves every 28 hours for 65 generations, giving rise to millions of undifferentiated cells
Seek out degenerationThey build, repair, and grow new tissue
Anti-inflammatory They are effective in reducing inflammation
ImmunomodulatoryThey help modulate the body’s immune responses
Is it Safe? And why?
Yes!
The use of Umbilical Cord Stem Cells is FDA cleared and our provider abides by all of the most stringent medical guidelines. Your comfort, safety, and recovery are the top concern.
The cells are rigorously tested and screened under NIH, FDA, AATB, and AABB guidelines.
Because UCSC are less mature than other cells, the body’s immune system is unable to recognize them as foreign and therefore, they are not rejected. There has never been a documented instance of rejection in graft vs. host.
Journal of Translational Medicine 2007, Stem Cell Therapy for Autism. Thomas E. Ichim, Fabio Solano, Eduardo Glenn, Frank Morales, Leonard Smith, George Zabrecky, and Neil H. Riordan