Exosomes have been researched in various medical contexts, particularly for their potential in regenerative medicine, immunomodulation, and targeted drug delivery.
It’s essential to note that Lyme disease can have complex and varied manifestations, and the course of the disease can differ from person to person.
Incorporating EXOSOMES into a multi-modality treatment regimen may help break the inflammatory cycle and provide the body with necessary cellular information to facilitate healing.
Cell therapy is key to reestablish the bodies regulation capacity in chronically ill patients. While stem cells are considered the body’s building blocks for repair and healing, exosomes are the doing the actual work. They serve as important messengers that can help in cell optimization, repair processes, and mobilizing the body’s stem cells and healing processes, using them to trigger new processes and transport certain messages across barriers.
Instead of only focusing on the buildings (the cells), changing the spread the information by the people (the exosomes) can change how Lyme disease spreads and reduce the inflammation, among other aspects of the infection.
Regenerative medicine aims to improve the regeneration of damaged, malfunctioning, and missing tissue and organs. While stem cells still serve a crucial purpose, exosomes create an extraordinary opportunity for science to use them as inherent tools for medical intervention and drug delivery – specifically disguising certain drugs through manipulation.