Tired of concealing your pain?

Our joints play a crucial role in connecting our entire skeletal structure and facilitating various movements, making it quite common to experience pain and discomfort in them, particularly as we get older or suffer a sports injury.

Although medication can provide temporary relief from joint pain, it doesn't address the underlying issue. At Rapha Wellness, our provider and team provide regenerative therapy as a solution for managing pain. Recognizing that there's no one-size-fits-all approach, we adopt a holistic strategy, employing various techniques to alleviate pain and facilitate healing.

If you're experiencing joint or muscular discomfort, it's essential not to overlook it any further. At Rapha Wellness, our aim is to assist you in improving your well-being rather than simply concealing your pain.

How we can help

Our approach to treating joint pain involves introducing regenerative cells, which have the potential to develop into many different types of cells in the body, into specific areas of the knees, wrists, shoulders, elbows, hips, or spine that have been damaged. The aim is to stimulate the regeneration and growth of deteriorated tissue and cartilage, which are contributing to joint discomfort, restricted motion, inflammation, and impaired functionality. With the final outcome being healing instead of symptom management.

The results of regenerative therapy for joint issues can vary depending on individual factors such as overall health, medical background, extent of joint degeneration, and more.

  • Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) is blood plasma that's been boosted with a patients’ own platelets, which are vital for healing injuries. These platelets release various growth factors and cytokines, stimulating the mending of both bone and soft tissue. Platelets are specialized blood cells crucial in the healing process and house natural growth factors essential for cell recruitment and multiplication during wound repair. Typically, our blood holds around 200,000 platelets per microliter. However, in PRP, this count should ideally reach or exceed 1,000,000 platelets per microliter, which signifies a concentration five times higher. PRP is prepared in the clinic using a centrifuge, which separates blood components, discarding unwanted elements while retaining platelets, growth factors, cytokines, and plasma necessary for PRP therapy. This process takes less than ten minutes to concentrate platelets after drawing blood from the patient.

    • Tendonitis (rotator cuff, biceps, plantar fasciitis)

    • Ligament Injury

    • Degenerative Joint Disease (arthritis in different joints)

    • Back pain

  • Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) is undergoing examination and application across numerous orthopedic ailments. There exist more than 30 level 1 research studies indicating that PRP outperforms steroid or hyaluronic acid injections in treating knee osteoarthritis. PRP has been extensively applied and researched in addressing nearly every tendon and ligament injury within the orthopedic realm. Additionally, PRP has demonstrated efficacy in alleviating back pain stemming from various conditions like disc disease or facet arthrosis.

    Based on the findings, PRP demonstrates the capacity to:

    • Diminish inflammation, a significant contributor to discomfort.

    • Facilitate the healing process.

    • Stimulate the development of robust tissue.