Since the beginning of time, Chinese people have liked to rejuvenate themselves with the body fluids of young men and women. Most notably, Chinese rulers of ancient times used elixirs made of the blood, semen, etc. of animals, but also from humans. More than 5,000 years ago, the legendary “Yellow Emperor”, for example, advised older men to engage sexually with young women to remain young and vigorous. However, the men were meant to use their sexual energies sparingly, in order not to ruin the rejuvenating effect by “overdoing” things.
I often travel to medical congresses and to compare notes with colleagues from around the world. Recently, I visited China, where some physicians are also working with autologous stem cells just like me. When I was there, a Chinese colleague demonstrated to me how he harvests fat of young women, isolates stem cells from it, cultivating them and subsequently using them for the therapy of older patients.
Of course, the donors undergo health tests first. According to the Chinese doctor, therapy is free of side effects. There are no rejection reactions.
According to reports, older patients in particular with chronic health problems profit from this greatly, however, for younger patients also suffering from chronic illnesses, such as arthritis, he prefers to use stem cells from young female donors rather than their own autologous stem cells. According to his opinion, the donated stem cells have greater levels of vitality.
Apart from older people, successful results have apparently also been achieved with younger people, who might have problems with an unhealthy lifestyle, alcohol, etc.
This approach seems certainly attractive and who knows, perhaps we will soon be seeing young women donating fat for curing older family members’ ailments? In my clinic, enough people ask me if their plumper partner/boyfriend/girlfriend could donate fat and stem cells for augmenting the breasts of a thin patient.
I think that it is unnecessary to risk an infection by using cells from other people, since an older patient’s autologous stem cells have considerably more vitality than the rest of his body. For this reason, these cells can be used successfully in therapy. In addition to treatment of joint deterioration, stem cells from autologous fat might well be used in therapy for many degenerative and chronic illnesses as well as for general physical regeneration and performance enhancement.
Following the workshop we had taken part in and very pleased with my gift of delicious “Moon Cake” (Chinese cake made of lotus seeds), the Chinese colleague offered to give me injections of stem cells from a young Chinese woman, so I could test the rejuvenating effect myself. I politely turned down the offer. But who knows – I might think differently about it 20 years from now!
DDr. Heinrich, MD