Knee Pain Treatments: New FDA-Compliant Bone Marrow Concentrate Therapy Advancements Bring Hope and Relief For Knee Arthritis

Knee arthritis affects more Americans than any other joint disorder in the United States. By age 60, an estimated 10 percent of men and 13 percent of women have knee arthritis. Knee arthritis and chronic knee pain often mean that you have to avoid the activities you love (from hiking to dancing to chasing the grandchildren), relying on over-the-counter pain medications, toxic steroid injections, dangerous narcotics, knee arthroscopy, and knee replacement surgery. But new advancements in bone marrow concentrate therapy (that comes from the patient, not someone else) offer hope, healing, and pain relief for arthritis of the knee. 

Symptoms and Treatments: How Is Knee Arthritis Identified and Cured?

Arthritis of the knee, as with arthritis anywhere else in your body, is the result of chronic inflammation in your joints resulting in deterioration and degeneration of the structures in the knee. Common symptoms for knee arthritis include:

  • Swelling and tenderness in your knee or knees, with swelling being more prominent after activity. 
  • Unstable knee. Over time, if left untreated, knee arthritis can create weakness and instability in your knee. This can cause your knee to lock up, freeze up, or even buckle when you put weight on it.
  • Poor, limited range of motion in your knee when doing everyday activities, such as sitting, standing, and walking.

If your doctor diagnoses you with knee arthritis, he or she may recommend a combination of medical interventions and lifestyle modifications. These may include:

  • Low-impact exercise/physical therapy
  • Losing weight if you’re overweight
  • Acupuncture, natural topical creams, and ice packs

Common medical interventions often start with taking over-the-counter pain medications like aspirin, ibuprofen, and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). NSAIDs can temporarily help pain associated with arthritis but can lead to damage in the heart, kidneys, and GI tract over the long term and do not improve long-term pain. More serious medical approaches often graduate to:

  • Prescription pain drugs
  • Injections, such as corticosteroid injections to temporarily reduce pain 
  • Surgery

Are Corticosteroid Injections Helpful For Knee Arthritis?

Your doctor may recommend corticosteroid injections for knee arthritis. Corticosteroids are powerful anti-inflammatory agents that temporarily reduce inflammation in an arthritic joint. Unfortunately, corticosteroids are also toxic to cartilage and increase the rate of arthritic progression. In a recent 2020 study from The Bone and Joint Journal, patients with knee arthritis who underwent corticosteroid injections were compared to patients with similar levels of knee arthritis who did not have any steroid injections. The patients who were given steroid injections were more than six times as likely to undergo a knee replacement. 

While helpful for knee pain in the short term, corticosteroid injections can actually worsen knee arthritis and pain over the long term. 

Is Surgery the Right Answer For Knee Pain and Knee Arthritis?

Your doctor may recommend a knee replacement, which involves removing the damaged knee joint entirely and installing an artificial knee. 

In fact, arthritis is the #1 reason for people to get knee replacement surgery or hip replacement surgery. However, most surgeons recommend joint replacement surgery be the last resort because:

  • Knee replacements wear out and most will need to be replaced, which is an even bigger operation than the first.
  • There have been many “mechanical problems” and manufacturer recalls related to artificial joints.
  • The surgery itself can cause damage to your joints and bones and may entail a long recovery process.
  • An artificial joint that becomes infected is a very serious complication that can lead to another joint replacement and long term IV antibiotics in the best case or can lead to leg amputation in more serious cases. 
  • More than one-third of patients who have a knee replacement still have knee pain.
  • Range of motion in the knee after the surgery is usually reduced significantly.

Thankfully, a growing body of research is revealing new, cutting-edge approaches to knee arthritis, with many men and women finding the relief they need through bone marrow concentrate therapies.

Bone Marrow Concentrate Therapy and Knee Arthritis

The premise is simple, yet the science is groundbreaking. Your bone marrow and blood get drawn through a patented same-day protocol, and then processed by a specialized lab.

Then, your concentrated bone marrow and natural growth factors are injected under precise image-guidance using sonographic and X-ray devices directly into multiple tissue structures in your affected knee (eg. cartilage, ligaments, tendons, bone, meniscus). This provides more healing agents to the injured, degenerated, and inflamed joint than your body would otherwise send to the area, resulting in significant improvements in your knee pain and knee function within just a few months.

Unfortunately, the world of bone marrow concentrate treatments is often referred to by scientists as a “wild wild west.” The efficacy of these procedures for knee arthritis and chronic knee pain means many companies have rushed to market with various health claims and procedures. Alas, many (if not most) of what you’ll find on the market — such as the use of exosomes or umbilical cord “stem cells” — isn’t backed by real research and in fact, is illegal to use

When choosing a bone marrow concentrate therapy treatment for knee arthritis, it’s critical that you look for a procedure that’s truly backed by science, and specifically peer-reviewed randomized controlled medical trials and other clinical trials.

When reviewing the published research, the science is clear: The most advanced and effective regenerative therapy for knee arthritis is an image-guided injection of your bone marrow concentrate (BMC) into the joint and sometimes into the bone.

In one study, BMC injections into the knee joint significantly reduced the need for knee replacement surgery. Another study tracked patients for 15 years and found that BMC injections into the bone also significantly reduced the need for knee replacement.

At Regenexx, this is the exact same procedure we employ in our clinics. These advancements in therapy and technology mean our Regenexx approach, overseen by expert technicians and clinicians who have been doing this for over a decade, is far more effective than the run-of-the-mill treatments offered by other providers.

If you suffer from knee arthritis and want to avoid costly and invasive knee replacement surgery, contact us today to learn how you can use these advancements in therapy to naturally and effectively target your knee health concerns. 

 

About The Author
Ignatios Papas, DO

Ignatios Papas, DO

Ignatios Papas, DO, is a non-surgical orthopedic physician specializing in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Regenexx® at New Regeneration Orthopedics.
Ignatios Papas, DO

Ignatios Papas, DO

Ignatios Papas, DO, is a non-surgical orthopedic physician specializing in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Regenexx® at New Regeneration Orthopedics.

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