Stem Cell Therapy for Knee Injuries: Is It Right for You?
How Stem Cell Therapy Is Changing Knee Treatment in South Florida
By the NovaGenix Medical Team · Updated June 2026 · 8 min
read
If you've been dealing with a knee injury, whether it's a
torn meniscus, chronic osteoarthritis, ligament damage, or just that nagging
pain that never quite goes away, you've probably been told at some point that
your options are either cortisone shots, physical therapy, or surgery. For a
lot of patients, none of those feel like a great answer. Expensive surgical
procedures that take weeks or months to recover from, with no guarantee that
the issue will improve or steroid injections like cortisol which are a
temporary band aid to a larger problem leave few viable options for many
patients.
This is where regenerative medicine is opening the door to
new treatment options and changes how we think about healing and recovery. At
NovaGenix Health & Wellness in Jupiter, Florida, we have been working with
patients across Palm Beach County and South Florida who are looking for
alternatives to surgery and long-term pain management for over ten years. One
of the most promising areas of regenerative medicine is cellular therapy for
knee injuries. As patients look for answers and awareness continues to grow,
stem cell therapy has become one of the most frequently discussed treatment
options among patients looking for alternatives to surgery or long-term pain
management. We often hear “I’m not ready to go under the knife.” Or “The
cortisone shot only works for a few weeks and then the pain comes back.”
Patients are looking for alternatives that will potentially help them get back
on the road to recovery.
The excellent news for patients is that Florida has taken a
significant step in expanding access to regenerative medicine by enacting
Senate Bill 1768, which allows licensed physicians to offer certain stem cell
therapies for orthopedic conditions, including knee injuries, along with wound
care and pain management under specific regulatory requirements. While many of
these therapies have not yet received FDA approval for these uses, the law
requires informed patient consent, strict sourcing standards, and transparent
disclosure, providing Floridians with greater access to innovative treatment
options under physician supervision.
So, let's break it down honestly to see if stem cell
injections may be the right course of treatment for you.
Why the Knee Is So Difficult to Heal
Our knee’s are one of the most complex and heavily used
joints in the body due to its pivotal role in walking, stability and mobility.
It bears your full body weight with every step you take, absorbs the impact of
exercise and getting around in everyday life, and is held together by a complex
web of cartilage, tendons, and ligaments that have notoriously poor blood
supply making them particularly slow in terms of healing and recovery. The most
commonly injured ligaments and tendons in the knee tend to include the anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL), medial collateral ligament (MCL), posterior cruciate
ligament (PCL), patellar tendon, and quadriceps tendon. These structures are
frequently damaged during sports, exercise, or everyday activities involving twisting,
sudden changes in direction, jumping, or direct impact to the knee. Whether you’re
a running back who twisted wrong getting tackled or an average everyday joe who
slipped getting out of the shower, knee injuries can dramatically impact life
when our abilities to move around have been taken from us.
From a regenerative standpoint, that poor blood supply to
these ligaments and tendons is the core problem behind why healing can be an
issue for so many patients. When tissues are injured, your body relies on
healthy blood flow to deliver oxygen, nutrients, and natural repair signals like
platelets, exosomes and growth factors that help reduce inflammation and
support healing. Cartilage in the knee joint has very limited circulation,
which is why damage to the meniscus or articular cartilage heals so slowly, or
often doesn't fully heal at all. Over time, wear and inflammation compound the
original injury, and you end up with a knee that's chronically painful, stiff,
and limiting your quality of life. Not only recreational but everyday house
hold tasks can become problematic.
Traditional treatments manage the symptoms however regenerative
medicine is attempting to address the underlying damage and heal from the
inside out.
What Is Stem Cell Therapy for Knee Injuries?
Think of stem cells as the body's raw material, cells that
haven't been given a specific job yet. Unlike a muscle cell that knows it's a
muscle cell, or a bone cell that knows it's a bone cell, stem cells are still
figuring out what they want to be when they grow up. That flexibility is
exactly what makes them so interesting and promising in its role in the future
of medicine.
Depending on the type, some stem cells are incredibly
versatile and do just about anything. Certain early-stage cells can
theoretically develop into almost any tissue in our body. Others are more
specialized, meaning they’re capable of becoming a limited range of related
cell types, like bone, cartilage, or connective tissue. For knee injuries
specifically, it's this last group, called mesenchymal stem cells, that get the
most attention, due to their ability to support repair in precisely the kinds
of tissue that the knee relies on.
In regenerative medicine, the idea is simple in its approach:
get concentrated healing signals and stem cells to the exact place in the body
that needs them most. Whether that's through platelet-rich plasma (PRP) which
uses your own blood, processed to concentrate its natural growth factors or
through cellular tissue allografts, the goal is going to be the same. We're not
replacing the damaged joint or fitting it with screws or ball bearings. We're
giving your body a better environment and more resources to do what it already
knows how to do: heal itself. For some patients, this is a great option. Others
may unfortunately need surgery. The fact is, you should speak to a physician knowledgeable
in these areas of medicine to help you make the most informed medical decision
and come up with a plan with your provider to give you the best chance of repairing
the damaged tissue
At NovaGenix, we offer minimally invasive regenerative
treatments using two primary biological approaches:
Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) uses your own blood, which
is processed to concentrate the platelets and growth factors that naturally
orchestrate healing. PRP injections into the knee deliver a concentrated dose
of your body's own repair signals directly to the damaged tissue.
Cellular tissue allografts derived from Wharton's Jelly
— the gelatinous substance found in umbilical cord tissue, contains mesenchymal
stem cells (MSCs) and a rich matrix of growth factors. These are sourced from
screened donors following c-section births, processed at certified cell banks,
and contain no fetal tissue. The umbilical cord is donated after a healthy
birth, no embryos are involved, and there is no risk to the mother or baby. All
cellular biologic products come with certification of sterility and purity from
the tissue banks.
What Conditions Can Regenerative Knee Treatments Help
With?
Patients come to us with a wide range of knee injuries and concerns.
The ones we most commonly speak to regarding regenerative treatments include:
Osteoarthritis of the knee — arguably the most common
reason people seek out regenerative options. As cartilage wears down over
decades, bone begins rubbing on bone, causing pain, stiffness, and
inflammation. Regenerative treatments aim to reduce inflammation and support
the remaining cartilage rather than simply masking the pain. The science backing regenerative treatment for
knee OA is no longer in its infancy. Clinical studies have shown that
mesenchymal stem cells can relieve pain, improve function, and support
cartilage repair, and a major 2025 meta-analysis reviewing years of randomized
controlled trial data confirmed those benefits in real patients even stating
that there was a “significant
reduction in VAS pain scores compared to controls.” and that “Intra-articular
MSC injection is an effective treatment for osteoarthritis, providing
significant and durable improvements in pain relief, functional recovery, and
activity levels up to 24 months post-treatment.” You can
read the full research here.
Meniscus tears — the meniscus is the rubbery
cartilage that cushions the knee joint. Partial tears in active patients are a
frequent candidate for regenerative therapy, particularly when surgery would
mean significant downtime or risk. For
patients who've been told surgery is the only fix for a torn meniscus, a study
published in a Nature journal offers some encouraging news, a phase I
clinical trial of intra-articular stem cell injections for meniscus injuries
showed the treatment was safe with no adverse effects, and MRI imaging
confirmed measurable improvement in the meniscus of treated patients. You can
read the full study here.
Ligament sprains and partial tears — the ACL, PCL,
MCL, and LCL are all structures that benefit from enhanced healing support.
While complete ruptures typically require surgical repair, partial injuries may
respond well to regenerative treatment as part of a comprehensive recovery
plan. For ligament injuries like ACL tears, regenerative therapy is emerging as
a promising tool to help the body heal more completely and in a systematic
review of 11 studies on stem cell treatment for ACL injuries, it was concluded
that the clinical application of stem cells may be a good adjunctive treatment
option for promoting ligament healing and recovery. Read the full PubMed review
here. It
highlights the need for more studies and trials so that we may be able to learn
as much as we can to help advance these healthcare treatments.
Tendinopathy — chronic degeneration of the tendons
around the knee, something that we usually see in runners and active patients,
can be notoriously resistant to standard treatment. PRP, in particular has
shown promise in tendon healing research. Chronic tendon degeneration around
the knee is one of the hardest conditions to treat with conventional medicine, but
regenerative approaches are showing real promise. A narrative review of
biologic therapies for tendon and ligament injuries found that PRP demonstrates
sustained pain and function improvement in chronic tendinopathies, while MSCs
show promise in enhancing graft integrity and tissue repair. Full study here.
Post-surgical recovery — many patients use
regenerative treatments alongside traditional rehabilitation to support faster
and more complete healing following knee procedures. From dentistry to hip replacements,
the ability to accelerate healing is a very real application of this type of
medicine. Many patients don't realize
that regenerative therapy doesn't have to be an either/or choice with surgery
and as a matter of fact, stem cells are increasingly being used alongside
surgical procedures to support faster, more complete healing of things like
knee cartilage and tissue. Clinical trials of MSC implantation following knee
surgery have shown remarkable improvement in functional scores including the International
Knee Documentation Committee score and Tegner activity level, with evidence
of hyaline cartilage-like tissue formation observed at previously damaged areas
after treatment. Read the full study here.
What Does Science Say?
This is the honest part of the conversation, and it matters.
Its important to include actual clinical trials and research to make informed
decisions instead of anecdotal evidence and marketing claims.
Regenerative medicine for orthopedic conditions is truley
exciting and rapidly evolving field, but it's also important to be clear about
where the science stands. The FDA has not approved stem cell therapies for
orthopedic conditions including knee pain, osteoarthritis, or ligament
injuries. The only currently FDA-approved stem cell treatments in the US are
hematopoietic (blood) stem cell transplantations for blood disorders and
certain cancers. It's also worth noting
that in Florida, physician-administered regenerative treatments using biologic
tissue products, including Wharton's Jelly-derived cellular allografts,
amniotic tissue, and PRP, are legally performed under physician supervision and
are regulated under FDA guidelines for human cellular and tissue-based products
(21 CFR Part 1271). Florida's medical framework supports licensed physicians in
offering these minimally invasive regenerative treatments in a clinical
setting, making it one of the more accessible states in the country for
patients seeking this type of care. At NovaGenix, every treatment is performed
by or under the direct supervision of Dr. Mackey, ensuring full compliance with
both state and federal guidelines. With years of experience, he is a valuable source
of information regarding the utilization and potential benefits of regenerative
medicine.
That said, there is a meaningful and growing body of
research exploring the safety and potential benefits of cellular treatments for
musculoskeletal conditions. Clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov
continue to investigate these therapies, and many physicians working in
regenerative medicine, including our team at NovaGenix, monitor this research
closely and use it to inform how we approach patient care. With legislation and
FDA approval in constant flux, its important to be up to date on what’s new in
regenerative medicine and stem cells.
PRP has arguably the strongest research base of the
available regenerative options for knee conditions. Multiple peer-reviewed
studies have examined its use in osteoarthritis and soft tissue injuries, with
many showing improvements in pain and function, particularly in earlier-stage
arthritis. The issue is that even though it’s a great option, it’s often not
enough especially in older patients who may be undergoing telomere shortening
on the tips of their chromosomes.
Mesenchymal stem cell treatments, including those derived
from Wharton's Jelly, are earlier in the research pipeline for orthopedic
applications but represent one of the most promising areas in regenerative
medicine. Researchers are actively studying their anti-inflammatory properties
and potential to support cartilage repair.
We believe in giving patients a complete and honest picture.
These treatments are not magic. They work best as part of a comprehensive
approach that includes proper evaluation, realistic expectations, and a
physician who knows your specific case. Some patients may benefit from surgery.
Other from a single cortisone injection. Our approach is to offer and recommend
what makes the most sense for you.
What to Expect at NovaGenix
Every patient who comes to us interested in regenerative
knee treatment starts the same way: a thorough consultation with Dr. Timothy
Mackey to review any imaging and discuss the options available before making
any recommendations. He has over two decades of clinical experience and takes a
careful, evidence-informed approach to regenerative medicine. Not every patient
is a candidate for every treatment, and we don't treat anyone as a
one-size-fits-all case.
If regenerative treatment is appropriate for your situation,
here's what the process generally looks like:
Consultation and evaluation — We review your history,
discuss your goals, and determine whether PRP, cellular tissue treatment, or a
combination approach makes the most sense for your knee.
The procedure itself — Regenerative knee injections
are minimally invasive and performed in-office. A local anesthesia is used at
the injection site so the process is relatively painless. Most patients tolerate them well and can
return home the same day. There is typically some soreness in the treated area
for a few days following the injection.
Recovery and follow-up — Regenerative treatments are
not instant fixes. The repair process takes time, and most patients begin
noticing meaningful changes over the course of several weeks to months. We
monitor your progress and adjust as needed.
Integration with your overall health plan — For many
patients, regenerative knee treatment works best alongside other supportive
therapies like peptides. Patients on peptide therapy, particularly BPC-157, may
benefit from the combined tissue repair support combined with the regenerative cellular
tissue treatments. We design integrated protocols for patients who want a
comprehensive approach which may include peptides when appropriate.
Who Is a Good Candidate?
Patients who tend to respond best to regenerative knee
treatments share a few common characteristics:
They're dealing with pain and functional limitations that
are significantly affecting their quality of life but haven't yet reached the
stage where joint replacement is the only remaining option, and I don’t blame
anyone looking to support alternative treatment options first. They're
motivated to be active participants in their recovery, not just looking for a temporary
fix. They have realistic expectations and understand that regenerative medicine
is a process, not a single injection that produces overnight results. It takes
time and even discipline. And it’s important for them to want to work with a
physician who will monitor their progress rather than a clinic that's simply
selling injections.
If you've been told surgery is your only option and you're
not ready to go that route, a consultation to discuss regenerative alternatives
is absolutely worth having. Theres nothing to lose.
A Note on Safety and Regulation
At NovaGenix we feel strongly about transparency when it
comes to this topic. There are many clinics operating across the country , and
significant online marketplaces, selling stem cell treatments with claims that
go well beyond what the current science supports them of being able to do. The
FDA has issued warnings about unregulated stem cell products, and patients
deserve to know the difference between legitimate physician-supervised
regenerative medicine and predatory marketing.
At NovaGenix, all biological products we use are sourced
from accredited, US-based cell banks that comply with FDA tissue regulations
under 21 CFR Part 1271. Our treatments are performed under physician
supervision with Dr. Mackey and proper patient screening, informed consent, and
follow-up monitoring. We are transparent about what is and isn't FDA-approved,
and we never make claims that overstate the evidence.
Your safety matters more than “a sale” and our history and
patient reviews reflect that. Our patients are just that…Patients first and
your health is the single most important thing to us.
Ready to Explore Your Options?
If you're living with knee pain and want to understand
whether regenerative medicine might be appropriate for your situation, the
first step is a conversation. Call us to learn more and see if we may be the
right choice for you.
NovaGenix Health & Wellness is located at 609 N.
Hepburn Ave, Suite 106, Jupiter, FL 33458, serving patients throughout Palm
Beach County and across Florida via telehealth.
📞 Call or text: (561)
277-8260
🌐
Learn more: www.NovaGenix.org/regenerative-medicine/jupiter-regenerative-medicine
📅
Book a free consultation: www.NovaGenix.org/more/contact-us
We serve patients from Jupiter, Palm Beach Gardens, West
Palm Beach, Tequesta, Hobe Sound, Port St. Lucie, Stuart, and throughout South
Florida.
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Medical Disclaimer: This article is for educational
purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Stem cell therapies for
orthopedic conditions are not FDA-approved. Individual results vary. Always
consult a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any treatment.
NovaGenix sources all biological products from accredited, US-based facilities
and performs thorough medical evaluations prior to treatment.
Tags: Stem Cell Therapy · Knee Pain · Regenerative
Medicine · PRP · Jupiter FL · NovaGenix · Palm Beach County · Knee Injury ·
Osteoarthritis · Sports Medicine · Wharton's Jelly · Mesenchymal Stem Cells ·
BPC-157
References:
1. Mechanisms and Challenges of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in
the Treatment of Knee Osteoarthritis (2025)
A recent peer-reviewed open-access article examining how MSCs work at a
cellular level to address knee OA, including anti-inflammatory mechanisms and
tissue regeneration pathways.
🔗
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12038463/
2. Stem Cells for the Treatment of Early to Moderate
Osteoarthritis of the Knee: A Systematic Review (2023)
A systematic review covering 539 patients and 576 knees treated with a single
intra-articular injection of MSCs for knee osteoarthritis, with reported
improvements in patient outcomes and knee function.
🔗
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10560289/
ClickZap
3. Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Based Therapy for
Osteoarthritis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Clinical Outcomes
(2025)
A comprehensive meta-analysis of 11 randomized controlled trials involving 811
patients, evaluating intra-articular MSC injections against control
interventions and measuring pain reduction and functional improvement scores.
🔗
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/cell-and-developmental-biology/articles/10.3389/fcell.2025.1746471/full
Medium
4. Efficacy and Safety of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Knee
Osteoarthritis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled
Trials (2025)
A rigorous analysis pulling from PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, and Scopus
databases evaluating both the clinical effectiveness and safety profile of MSC
treatments for knee OA patients.
🔗
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11887158/
5. Complications of Stem Cell-Based Injections for Knee
Osteoarthritis: A Systematic Review (2024)
A PRISMA-compliant systematic review from UC Irvine's Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery covering 48 studies to characterize the types and rates of adverse
events associated with stem cell injections for knee OA — providing important
safety context.
🔗
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11572451/
blogspot
What Mainstream
Science and The Media are Saying About Stem Cells:
1. ScienceDaily — Stanford Scientists Found a Way to Regrow
Cartilage and Stop Arthritis (January 2026)
One of the most exciting recent breakthroughs from a major
research university. Stanford Medicine researchers discovered that an injection
blocking a protein linked to aging can reverse the natural loss of knee
cartilage in older mice — and human cartilage samples from knee replacement
surgeries also began regenerating when exposed to the treatment. This is a
major mainstream science outlet reporting on cutting-edge cartilage
regeneration research. Shriasys
🔗 https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/01/260120000333.htm
2. Arthritis Foundation — Regenerative Medicine: Helping the
Body Heal Itself (2026)
The Arthritis Foundation is one of the most trusted patient
advocacy organizations in the country. The article highlights that regenerative
therapies are considered the future of medicine and represent a major shift
away from traditional treatment, showing promise for osteoarthritis and other
chronic conditions — with researchers at academic medical centers demonstrating
that regenerative fat-based and PRP treatments can significantly improve OA
pain and function. Natural Links
3. Nature / Cellular & Molecular Immunology — MSC
Therapy: A Pathway to Clinical Success (2023)
Published in Nature — one of the most prestigious scientific
journals in the world. A review of 15 randomized controlled trials and 11
non-randomized trials found net positive effects of MSCs on mitigating pain and
symptoms, with functional improvement in 12 out of 15 RCTs relative to
baseline, and cartilage protection or repair observed in 18 out of 21 clinical
studies. WEB20 Ranker
🔗 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41423-023-01020-1





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