Treatment

Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs)

The most widely used regenerative cells in longevity and regenerative medicine

Definition

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are multipotent adult stem cells found in bone marrow, adipose tissue, umbilical cord, and other tissues. Their primary therapeutic mechanism is not differentiation into new tissues but rather their paracrine effect: they secrete anti-inflammatory factors (IL-10, TGF-β), growth factors, and exosomes that modulate the immune system, stimulate local regeneration, and reduce cellular senescence in the microenvironment.

Detailed explanation

MSCs have three principal clinical sources: adipose tissue (minimally invasive liposuction, abundant and easy to obtain), bone marrow (more invasive, greater potency), and umbilical cord (allogeneic, young, no patient extraction required).

Their immunomodulatory properties make them particularly valuable in autoimmune diseases, advanced osteoarthritis, and systemic longevity protocols. Studies in Stem Cell Research & Therapy (2020) show a 70% reduction in systemic inflammatory markers following IV infusion.

In Spain, MSC therapies require specific authorisation from AEMPS under the advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMP) regulatory framework. Clinics operating legally use GMP-certified products with full traceability from the donor.

Exosomes derived from MSCs are an emerging cell-free alternative that replicates many of the therapeutic effects with a lower regulatory risk profile.

Scientific sources

Related terms

Exosomesfactor paracrinoinmunomodulacion

Interested in related treatments?

Generate My Protocol

Content created by the LongevityMap editorial team based on peer-reviewed scientific literature. Sources: PubMed, Cochrane Library. This content does not replace professional medical advice. Our team · Methodology