American women are on the hit list for autoimmune disorders as they account for 80% of autoimmune disorder-afflicted patients in the US. Dr David Green Arizona provides a range of stem cell therapy options for people suffering from life-threatening diseases. It's time to learn more about autoimmune diseases and their associated data. This blog will guide you through how stem cell therapy reduces inflammation and what are the most common triggers.
Everything You need to know about antigen and antibodies
Autoimmune diseases attack the body's immune system to work against the individual by destroying healthy body tissues. Science has evaluated more than 80 types of immune disorders. The immune system helps the body protect against harmful substances such as bacteria, toxins, viruses, blood, and tissue outside the body, known as antigens.
The immune system produces antibodies to fight against the antigens naturally. Autoimmune diseases attack the immune system so that it fails to distinguish the harmful antigens and healthy tissues. As a result, the body reacts to destroy healthy tissues.
How are stem cells used to treat autoimmune diseases by Dr. David Greene?
Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells are the best source of stem cells. Stem cells such as hESC and iPSC are used to treat disorders such as Rheumatoid Arthritis, Systematic Lupus,
Multiple Sclerosis, Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, and Inflammatory bowel.
These stem cells are extracted from the autologous fatty tissues as they have the potential to heal the recovery and produce huge volumes. In addition, research and clinical trials suggest that inflammatory diseases such as diabetes mellitus and multiple sclerosis can be cured by stem cell treatment.
The most common autoimmune disease in the southwestern United States, Arizona
An autoimmune disorder is the third most common type of chronic illness in the USA. The national institute for health accentuates the studies to depict that nearly 5-8% of the US population is affected by autoimmune disorders. American Autoimmune Diseases Association (AARDA) estimates that nearly 50 million US individuals are under the radar of such a chronic and life-threatening disorder.
The most common autoimmune disorders are as follows:
- Multiple sclerosis
- Diabetes type 1
- Rheumatoid arthritis,
- lupus
- Chron's disease
- Scleroderma
Who suffers more from autoimmune diseases? | What triggers autoimmune diseases?
There is a combination of factors regarding the causes of autoimmune diseases. However, environment and genes are the most common triggers for autoimmune diseases. Women are more prone to such disorders. An estimated 80% of overall autoimmune disorder-afflicted patients are women.
The hard fact says that its the leading cause of disability and eventually death in 45+ aged women. The cause behind the immune system's abnormal and destructive behavior is some external force, such as type 1 Diabetes, which is the destruction of the pancreatic beta cells.
Can stem cells improve/repair immune systems?
Stem cells hold the ability of self-renewal and develop into the adult and specialized cell type to function efficiently. Stem cells divide and renew themselves for extended periods as they are totipotent, pluripotent, unipotent, and multipotent.
In the case of an immune system, stem cells are known to show healing properties that defend and repair the damaged tissues and amend the immune system's response to shut the adverse pathological reactions. This encourages the immune system to fight off with regaining its natural ability. Stem cells produce anti-inflammatory agents n reduce the t regulatory cell production to protect the body against any immunological self-harm.
Conclusion
5-8% of the American population is under threat of getting affected by the adverse side effects of autoimmune disorders. Dr. David Greene, Arizona stem cell therapist with over 17 years of clinical expertise, is a one-stop solution or, you can say, a ray of hope for patients opting for natural healing and recovery.
Autoimmune disorders affect more than one organ or tissue type, such as blood vessels, joints, muscles, red blood cells, skin, connective tissues, and endocrine glands such as the pancreas or thyroid. If not treated correctly or if the symptoms are not controlled with several lifestyle changes and medications, the disorder may simultaneously affect more than one organ and eventually lead to death.
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