There is no ban on stem cells, or the research. There is only a ban on fetal cell research. Two different things.
It is very easy to walk into one of dozens of clinics here in the U.S. for stem cell treatment. There is nothing exotic about it, nor are the "...elites after stem cells." Stem cells are harvested from the patient, and re-injected at the site of injury/disease. It's foolhardy to have stem cells from an anonymous donor injected into your body. There could be all sorts of unintended/dangerous consequences. (Yes, I know there are clinics that do this in Central and South America.)
And umbilical cord stem cells and adult stem cells. I know plenty of new parents that had their newborn babies umbilical cord stem cells frozen just in case. I think Adrenochrome is used for entirely different satanic ritual purposes.
Absolutely. I saw umbilical cord blood being harvested for the stem cells. Before the drs even bothered to ask permission though, they sneaky-harvested it!
A friend of mine did three cycles of stem cell infusions and wow did it ever straighten out sooo many problems she had. Really, we all should do this! Not cheap. But if I could I would, and for my loved ones also.
The majority of stem cells used in 'research' come from fetal cells. Planned Parenthood was clearly set up as a means of mass procuring of fetal cells.
You're going to have to provide sauce for that statement. I myself just had stem cell treatment for my hips last month, here in Florida. There's nothing exotic about it. It's done multiple times per day, all over the country.
There is a high demand for fetal cells, so the cabal will obviously do everything they can to control the market. The cabal is happy to incentivize abortions if it means they can corner the market on fetal cells.
There have been plenty of studies done on umbilical and placental sources for stem cells. Most of these cells are either dead or non-viable. Regenexx and two other universities here in the states have tested these products, and exposed the companies marketing them.
My treatment was actually more complicated than most, and they combined treatments over several days because of the distance I had to travel. I have lumbar stenosis as a result of degenerative disc disease pinching nerves into my legs, and both hips have osteoarthritis and labral tears. I had nineteen injections of PRP and platelet lysate into L3, L4, and L5. My back pain was lowest on my list of concerns, but that resolved almost instantly, improving I'd say 85%. Leg pain is mostly gone now, four weeks later.
The hips are a bit different story. Since my right hip was in worse shape, the doctor used every stem cell he could harvest (from both iliac crests) in that location, and also did a "bone augmentation" procedure where they drilled into the ball of the femur to deliver some of the stem cells inside the bone. I don't know how many total injections were done. The left hip he used a newer technique, of micronized adipose tissue from my butt cheek injected inside the joint. Two days later, I had another injection of PRP into the right hip.
The hips are slow, and the general consensus is the six-week mark is when you begin noticing solid improvement. I'm at four weeks now, and while I'm still hobbling around, things are noticeably better. One thing that complicates matters is I can't take any pain medication. Opiates cause serious hiccups that interfere with my breathing, and meloxicam causes ringing in my hears and muffled hearing. NSAIDs actually interfere with the healing process, anyway. But to have to tough this out without any pain medication causes me to dig deep, shall we say.
The doctor said it would be wise for me to have periodic PRP boosters, every six months to start, then annually.
Regenexx is the industry pioneer and leader here in the U.S. I wouldn't trust any other clinic to provide this technology.
There is no ban on stem cells, or the research. There is only a ban on fetal cell research. Two different things.
It is very easy to walk into one of dozens of clinics here in the U.S. for stem cell treatment. There is nothing exotic about it, nor are the "...elites after stem cells." Stem cells are harvested from the patient, and re-injected at the site of injury/disease. It's foolhardy to have stem cells from an anonymous donor injected into your body. There could be all sorts of unintended/dangerous consequences. (Yes, I know there are clinics that do this in Central and South America.)
And umbilical cord stem cells and adult stem cells. I know plenty of new parents that had their newborn babies umbilical cord stem cells frozen just in case. I think Adrenochrome is used for entirely different satanic ritual purposes.
Absolutely. I saw umbilical cord blood being harvested for the stem cells. Before the drs even bothered to ask permission though, they sneaky-harvested it! A friend of mine did three cycles of stem cell infusions and wow did it ever straighten out sooo many problems she had. Really, we all should do this! Not cheap. But if I could I would, and for my loved ones also.
The majority of stem cells used in 'research' come from fetal cells. Planned Parenthood was clearly set up as a means of mass procuring of fetal cells.
You're going to have to provide sauce for that statement. I myself just had stem cell treatment for my hips last month, here in Florida. There's nothing exotic about it. It's done multiple times per day, all over the country.
There is a high demand for fetal cells, so the cabal will obviously do everything they can to control the market. The cabal is happy to incentivize abortions if it means they can corner the market on fetal cells.
There have been plenty of studies done on umbilical and placental sources for stem cells. Most of these cells are either dead or non-viable. Regenexx and two other universities here in the states have tested these products, and exposed the companies marketing them.
How is that going for you? Is it helping? And do they inject it into the hips, or is it an IV?
My treatment was actually more complicated than most, and they combined treatments over several days because of the distance I had to travel. I have lumbar stenosis as a result of degenerative disc disease pinching nerves into my legs, and both hips have osteoarthritis and labral tears. I had nineteen injections of PRP and platelet lysate into L3, L4, and L5. My back pain was lowest on my list of concerns, but that resolved almost instantly, improving I'd say 85%. Leg pain is mostly gone now, four weeks later.
The hips are a bit different story. Since my right hip was in worse shape, the doctor used every stem cell he could harvest (from both iliac crests) in that location, and also did a "bone augmentation" procedure where they drilled into the ball of the femur to deliver some of the stem cells inside the bone. I don't know how many total injections were done. The left hip he used a newer technique, of micronized adipose tissue from my butt cheek injected inside the joint. Two days later, I had another injection of PRP into the right hip.
The hips are slow, and the general consensus is the six-week mark is when you begin noticing solid improvement. I'm at four weeks now, and while I'm still hobbling around, things are noticeably better. One thing that complicates matters is I can't take any pain medication. Opiates cause serious hiccups that interfere with my breathing, and meloxicam causes ringing in my hears and muffled hearing. NSAIDs actually interfere with the healing process, anyway. But to have to tough this out without any pain medication causes me to dig deep, shall we say.
The doctor said it would be wise for me to have periodic PRP boosters, every six months to start, then annually.
Regenexx is the industry pioneer and leader here in the U.S. I wouldn't trust any other clinic to provide this technology.