Hey brother stem cells do not work as well as you think they do. The science is not there yet. Save your money and spend it on hookers and happy endings lol. Just kidding but not really though. I spent over 50k on stem cells from a very reputable clinic in Colombia that starts with biox and I got almost no improvement. Just wait a few more years because there are other options that may be available and may be more beneficial
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u/Zergs1
Idk if that will make you walk dude
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u/Warren_sl
In the mean time a good daily protocol to help with nerve regeneration would be having a good omega 3/vitamin/mineral intake combined with ErinaMAX by Nootropics Depot possibly stacked with their Tigers milk. I’ve had nerve damage in one of my fingers induced by frostbite years ago heal from this and others have had brain and nervous system benefits.
I wish you the best in your journey and I’m sorry you’ve endured this.
positive
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u/tfresca
You’ve posted before. Folks told you that the cure you are looking for won’t come from this treatment.
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u/Zumbgrl
Hey Adrian, have you looked into studies/trials?? ?
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u/mistersilver007
Just wait for nervgen to get accelerated fda approval on nvg-291. This is your best bet.
positive
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u/omarfx007
🙏
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u/Confident_Web3110
Immunotherapy mx. saw someone walk after having ms. They will tell you if they can help you or not.
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u/SoManyQuestions5200
Hey man there is so much misinformation in these comments, its disturbing.do a google search for those medical research institutions that have successfully done restored walking and contact them directly
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u/TemporaryCod5601
Hey brother, May our Heavenly Father bless you, may He take your pain away and lessen your burden. May he guide you divinely, with Angels by your side on your journey back to health!!! In Jesus's name, Amen.
positive
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u/Mr-Cantaloupe
There is very little chance you’ll be able to walk again with stem cell therapy; the data doesn’t support it. In a few years, maybe, but a lot of the ‘positive’ outcomes in trials are people’s quality of life improving, and a lot of scientists/researchers argue that a big reason for their improvements is from the rehab/physical therapy.
That doesn’t mean to give up hope, it HAS been done, and as time goes on the probability will get higher. Your best bet is applying and somehow participating in Clinical trials (I know, easier said than done), and there’s also ‘Neuromodulation’. Those two treatments would give you much higher odds to walk again than stem cell treatment.
Please don’t get scammed and give $30,000 to a company in Panama that promises you the ability to walk again.
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u/Severe_Place_119
This quote is pricey. Go to YOU regenerative clinic in Medeillin Colombia.
Sure they can beat that price for you.
It’s a small clinic with specialist doctors.
I’m not involved or educated in the medical field so may explain/ask this somewhat crudely but do have this issue.
Any hypothesis on how having variants of uncertain significance at the genetic level may play out with this method? Have VUS (unknown if cis or trans) at the TEX14 gene which is pivotal in instructing germ cells to form bonds during the spermatogenesis. With my variants they essentially have predicted them to cause sperm maturation to break down early due to missense instructions to use the wrong amino acids in forming cellular bonds. Would you expect that even if using stem cells, this breakdown would still happen in your test scenario because it’s at the genetic level?
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u/GlobalBox8288
Great work! Hope it becomes available for everyone. How about NOA patients with SCO? Is this technology possible to create sperm from tissue samples?
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u/Sea-Direction691
Great News. Could you care explain in simple language how will this actually help people with NOA to finally be able to reproduce. Like what would be the process?
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u/ResearcherExpress701
This is incredible if true. Is there a publication ? And source that can confirm it? It seems that there are no publications or reports (from private companies) describing in vitro gametogenesis in humans. Without any such evidence or support, it seems it's just your words.
There was recently a great discovery.
Inhibition of the 15-PGDH increases PGE2 which causes cartilage to regenerate as hialine cartilage.
In mouse of course.
Im a researcher and im trying to get to do an experiment on dogs (pet dogs with severe arthrosis), as a mid step.
The other day speaking with a traumatologist, she was really interested, so maybe in a couple years we could try this on humans…
Do what you need, but if i could, id wait for 2 or 3 years.
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u/brockloisl456
another chatGPT generated scam post by this user who seems to be pushing the same shitty clinics in every post he makes
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u/Cissylyn55
Look into prp
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u/jonnychimpoo
What kind of injury are you dealing with ?
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u/Ryan_MedConsultant
Totally understand the hesitation. From what I’ve heard after asking doctors, some regenerative knee treatments have been used for years in China and aren’t necessarily considered “new” there. That said, outcomes still seem to depend a lot on the exact diagnosis, imaging findings, the doctor’s experience, and whether the case is actually a good fit.
If it were me, I’d want a very clear explanation of what problem is being treated, what the realistic outcome is, and at what point surgery becomes the better option.
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u/Bodigaron1981
If you have access to an orthopedic surgeon specialized on stem cell therapy I would ask him directly with your medical reports and imaging. If you don’t have one I can get the feedback from one of them for you
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u/ThanosFisherman
Bro what kind of surgery? What's the diagnosis?
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u/Extension_Move1094
I would give stem cells a try for sure. My knees have improved so much after 25 million injected into each knee. Also, research walking backward. For me? I would do anything to avoid knee replacement surgery seeing all My friends with mixed results. With arthritis, you can’t wait until it’s the worst stage and expect SCs to help however. Better to do it sooner. I would recommend talking to Dr. Ivan at the Carabella Clinic in Tijuana and go from there.
A great friend of mine is a Neurosurgeon and he happens to be a stem cell pioneer in South Florida. He's very easy to talk to and has a way of putting things in terms that are understandable for those of us who aren't literal brain surgeons lol. I know he offers some level of telemedicine but tbh I don't know the details. Let me know if you'd like his info and I'll be more than happy to connect you with each other. Best wishes on your journey!
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u/silverfolders3
online physicians for this stuff sound dope, have you found any leads yet?
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u/slicesndices
I might use the email addresses you’ve already found (in your 2nd post) to 1) inquire of the services these providers offer and perhaps 2) elaborate on what you’re exactly looking for and 3) your cardiac history, if asked.
And, ask if the cardiologist knows of any neurologists specializing in regenerative medicine.
This type of medicine may be more advanced internationally in Mexico, India and Germany as of this date. I suspect OP might find some researchers helpful, if they are willing to communicate, their email addresses are generally found on their published studies.
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u/Thoreau80
There are both at the Mayo Clinic.
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u/Bodigaron1981
I have worked closely with a team of three cardiologists who did over 500 patients of stem cells for Ischemic Heart Disease. Two of them retired already, the last one I still see often for a study we are doing together. I have met a few of these guys but there are not so many with that kind of experience
Are you aware of the GAPS diet for autism? We put our son on it and the changes were pretty noticeable. The nice thing is that it is cheap and risk free. The challenge is finding stuff that they are willing to eat especially after they are accustomed to the standard diet. Luckily Ai has been pretty helpful in this regard.
That said I would recommend MUSE cells which are a type of stem cell that can cross the blood brain barrier. Our son has cerebral palsy and autism and the stem cells have definitely made a difference. Just beware of any clinic that claims that one treatment will be enough and make sure they are used to dealing with pediatric patients. Feel free to dm me for clinic recommendations we did a crazy amount of research before deciding on a clinic that we felt like we could trust.
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u/Ryan_MedConsultant
It totally makes sense you’re looking into this, but the hard part about the "abroad" search is separating the actual medical protocol from the clinic's marketing. The fastest way to make this less overwhelming is to pin down one missing piece. Instead of focusing on the destination or how fancy the hospital looks, it usually helps to narrow down the exact cell source and administration route (like IV vs intrathecal) first. When you were looking at those clinics, did they actually explain why they use a specific route for a 6-year-old, or was it left pretty open-ended?
I was involved in a study here in Houston For my TBI, where they injected, stem cells from my own adipose tissue via IV. I think it has helped me out 10 to 15% I am Looking into more stem cell treatment. Let me know what you find.
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u/Still-Arugula5773
I heard Dr. Calapai in Garden City NY is the go-to for stem cells, alternative and regenerative medicines. Will have to check him out.
BioRestorative Therapies is an absolutely terrible company.
While they has a legitimate technology in the hypoxic culture protocol— which they licensed from Regenexx a decade and a half ago— they have completely failed to commercialize it.
Their problem is that they rely on delusive financing. What that means is that they rely on hapless retail investors to bid up the share price so that they issue huge numbers of new shares to their financing partners, leaving the retail investors holding the bag.
I don’t believe any company this irresponsible can be successful.