K. Dean Reeves, M.D.

Clinical Associate Professor            Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Emphasis on Research in Use of Prolotherapy (Also called  Regenerative Injection Therapy)

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Use of Your Own Blood For Healing  

Why Does Blood Heal? (Platelets hold the keyHere is a picture of your blood.  It contains both cells and plasma (the liquid between the cells).   This is often present in an injury and bleeding into an injury is one way that healing is stimulated.  In an effort to understand why, examination of what parts of the blood stimulate healing has led to an awareness of the special importance of platelets. 

What are platelets and where do they come from? Platelets are fragments of cells that are produced in the bone marrow by a special cell  (see right picture)  called a megakaryocyte.  (This means "big cell in the blood". )  This special cell breaks into pieces, each of which is a platelet.  Platelets contain many special proteins that are called growth factors because they turn on growth and repair of cells, much as a key turning in a lock starts a car. 

 TWO WAYS TO USE BLOOD:   Unaltered and  Centrifuged 

Unaltered  Blood (Straight from your vein)  This is called Autologous Blood. Autologous means from you.  This involves taking blood from your own vein and injecting it into an area with a need for repair.   Earlier, in  the section called "What is RIT"  we described how dextrose causes growth factors to be produced by nearby cells.   Platelets already have growth factors that are produced and appear to have more potency that dextrose alone.   Using blood instead of dextrose is  more risky to health care workers because of a much greater potential for serious needle stick injuries (infections of the blood)  but it is not more risky to you because you can't reject or react to your own blood.  One limitation of unaltered blood is that it should not be used inside a large joint since red blood cells, when they break down,  irritate the lining of a joint.  Research articles  on use of unaltered blood have primarily been on use in "tennis elbow" and "plantar fasciosis/arch sprain",  but all ligaments and tendons have the potential of healing responses when exposed to unaltered blood.  Home

Centrifuged Blood (Platelet Rich Plasma, PRP)  This can accurately be called a Platelet Rich Autologous Blood Allograft.   Allograft means grafting from one part of you to another part.  Note that blood is a tissue since it has both cells and supporting connective tissue (plasma) but it is unusual because it is liquid tissue.  A skin graft, for example, needs to be "excised" or cut out to be grafted somewhere else.   However, blood as a liquid tissue can be injected, as long as the injection is accurate in location.  In an effort to substantially increase the practical function of blood as a graft and allow it to be injected in joints to help cartilage repair, a change in blood  is necessary. This change is to decrease red blood cells (to protect big joints) and increase the concentration of platelets (for a stronger repair effect). 

Most commonly this is done by taking 20 ml (1 ounce of your blood and placing it in a centrifuge for 15 minutes in a special container.  The results are drawn up in such a way that this 20 ml makes about 7 ml of a solution that has less cells and more platelets than unaltered blood.  The goal for platelet concentration is about 1 million platelets for every ml of centrifuged blood.   This platelet rich blood is primarily plasma because red blood cells are reduced (red blood cell poor)  in the centrifuge step.  Thus it is also called  platelet rich plasma.  It is still blood "tissue", containing both living cells (white and some red) and supportive connective tissue (plasma) supporting structure.  

This platelet rich plasma naturally contains 7 growth factors, similar to what we have described with dextrose stimulation.  It also naturally includes 3 molecules that make things stick together call adhesion molecules. These are called fibrin and fibronectin and vitronectin)  When injected together with growth factors, the adhesion molecules help to keep the solution together to act as a graft.  Thus platelet rich plasma it autologous and a variation of blood and is a graft onto yourself (allograft).  Thus the term platelet rich autologous blood allograft.   Home

Things To Consider:

Sounds exciting and promising, and indeed it is. However several things need to be kept in mind. 

The smaller specialized centrifuge container makes less than 1 teaspoonful  (4 ml) of the platelet rich plasma and the larger container makes 2 teaspoonfuls.  (10 ml) This  does not cover a large area, and is more suitable to treatment of small areas.   Information on the internet about treating "backs" or " necks" with platelet rich plasma is potentially misleading.  

Platelet rich autologous blood autograft will likely achieve faster and more substantial results than dextrose alone.  However without more research, switching away from dextrose as the primary solution for regeneration efforts is like putting the "cart ahead of the horse." 

Making platelet rich plasma is costly and statements about this being covered by insurance are partly inaccurate.  Medicare does not cover this treatment at this time and with other insurers pre-authorization is required and that is not a guarantee of payment.  Nevertheless, the high level athlete in a hurry to heal may want to utilize PRP. Home

For More information, on PRP an article was published by Dr. Crane that is much more informative.

The reference is: 

Crane D, Everts PAM. Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) Matrix Grafts. Pract Pain Mgmnt 08(1):12-26 

A PDF of this article is  not availble for posting on this site. 

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Best regards, 

 

Dr. Reeves 

 

 

 

 

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Last modified: December 29, 2008