The New York Times reports in A Promising Treatment for Athletes, in the Blood on a new treatment for injuries:
Experts in sports medicine say that if the technique’s early promise is fulfilled, it could eventually improve the treatment of stubborn injuries like tennis elbow and knee tendinitis for athletes of all types.
The method, which is strikingly straightforward and easy to perform, centers on injecting portions of a patient’s blood directly into the injured area, which catalyzes the body’s instincts to repair muscle, bone and other tissue. Most enticing, many doctors said, is that the technique appears to help regenerate ligament and tendon fibers, which could shorten rehabilitation time and possibly obviate surgery.
Research into the effects of platelet-rich plasma therapy has accelerated in recent months, with most doctors cautioning that more rigorous studies are necessary before the therapy can emerge as scientifically proven. But many researchers suspect that the procedure could become an increasingly attractive course of treatment for reasons medical and financial.
I've struggled for months with tendinitis in both elbows (not to mention, knee surgery for a torn meniscus last summer). This "...platelet-rich plasma therapy..." could prove a great boon in keeping us aging athletes in the game(s)/gym.
Alpha^2
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