Houston, Texas, surgeon David Lintner, M.D., uses a slurry of stem cells to aid healing after his repair of a torn rotator-cuff. As reported on July 23 by Kyrie O’Connor for Chron (Houston Chronicle), Linter drills holes in his patient’s bone and extracts bone marrow. While Lintner is suturing the muscles and tendons that keep the shoulder stable to the bone, the bone marrow and blood from the holes in the bone is taken to the other end of the operating room where it is spun into a bloody slurry containing stem cells.
When he has finished with tying down the tendons Lintner takes the prepared stem cell mixture and injects it into the shoulder. The prepared bone marrow, he says, which contains stem cells, platelets and growth factors, will act “like fertilizer” on the shoulder repair to accelerate healing. “There are lots of wonderful things in there that are helpful for healing, ” he says.
The patient, a man of 54, reported that he had full range of motion in his shoulder at three months and was 100% recovered at the end of four months. He had had the same operation on his other rotator cuff in 2009. The surgeon and surgery had been the same except that no stem cells were used in the prior operation. The patient said that it took him almost a year to recover from that surgery. The second repair also required much less physical therapy than had the first.


If it works then why is it not standard of care ?
If it were the standard of care, the loss of revenue to medical system as a whole would be staggering. Months to years less of physical therapy and pharmaceutical requirements. Billions of dollars. In the end its about the dollars
I have heard that stem cells should be uder 7 days old to be effective??