Josh Redd
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We can inject stem cells and just light speeds their kind of their return to play, which is really cool.
But my medical director does kind of all the injections for our standard patients.
We've had a patient who was like pretty much bone on bone, couldn't even walk up a stair, that's now walking six miles, doing Pilates, feels great, right?
For the most part, stem cells, it's getting better and better every year.
The advancements are getting better and better, and it's really cool.
Is it like sports injuries and stuff like that?
Pretty much.
Sports injuries are just joint articulation-type problems.
So any type of joint injury, soft tissue injury, those are the things that we kind of focus on now more than anything.
And the younger a patient is,
the more likely they're going to improve and be better off.
But when I was at Johns Hopkins, my professor's lab, they could sever a mouse's spine and make it quadriplegic, and then they could inject stem cells and it could fully walk again.
whoa and so i was i already had like seven clinics at the time and i was in that lab and i'm i was in that class and i'm looking at all the research and i'm seeing all the stuff i'm like this is going to change all of health care so from that day i committed to go back to medical school went back to medical school and then did a residency in regenerative medicine and now i'm doing what i'm doing but the combo of every single thing that we have at our fingertips to help patients
It's awesome.
It's so cool.
Wow.
Do you inject the stem cells like via IV or locally?
So our really sick patients that have autoimmune conditions and problems will do stem cell IVs.
And a lot of them improve in conjunction with diet, lifestyle, nutrition, all that stuff.
It's another tool to help aid in helping them improve.