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Regenerative Medicine

Regenerative Medicine by State and City

PRP, stem cell, and orthobiologic therapies for joints, healing, and longevity. Pick a state, then a city — clinicians are sourced live from the federal NPPES NPI Registry.

Regenerative Medicine care

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About the specialty

What regenerative medicine do

Regenerative Medicine are the clinicians patients see for care in their specialty area. PRP, stem cell, and orthobiologic therapies for joints, healing, and longevity. A visit typically starts with a focused history and physical exam, followed by any imaging or lab work needed to confirm a diagnosis, and ends with a treatment plan that combines lifestyle changes, medication, in-office procedures, and — when appropriate — referral to a sub-specialist. Most regenerative medicine treat both new patients and long-term follow-ups.

Common symptoms regenerative medicine treat

  • Joint pain
  • Tendon injuries
  • Arthritis pain
  • Slow-healing injury
  • Chronic back pain
  • Post-surgical recovery

Conditions regenerative medicine manage

  • Osteoarthritis
  • Tendinopathy
  • Rotator cuff injury
  • Meniscus injury
  • Chronic low back pain
  • Ligament sprains

Questions to ask at your first visit

  1. 1What's the diagnosis, and how confident are you in it?
  2. 2Which treatment options exist, and what does the evidence say about each?
  3. 3How many patients like me do you see in a typical month?
  4. 4What are the side effects or risks of the plan you're recommending?
  5. 5When should I follow up, and how do I reach the office between visits?
  6. 6Is there a lifestyle change that would meaningfully improve this?

How to choose regenerative medicine

  • Confirm board certification through the relevant American Board of Medical Specialties member board.
  • Look for a sub-specialty focus that matches your condition rather than a generalist when the case is complex.
  • Ask about annual case volume for the specific procedure or condition you need care for.
  • Verify the practice is in-network with your insurance and works with an in-network hospital.
  • Prefer a clinician who explains options in plain language and doesn't push a single approach.

District of Columbia (DC)

1 city