The Mail on Sunday

Fix that achy knee ... by injecting it with your belly fat

- By Rachel Ellis

AN INJECTION of cells from a patient’s own stomach fat could end the agony of arthritis in the knee. The experiment­al procedure involves removing a small amount of fat from the patient’s abdomen with a fine, hollow metal tube called a cannula.

There moved tissue is then ‘washed’ to look for and separate out pericyte cells, which are found in the lining of blood vessels in fat.

These work like stem cells, which are well-known for their healing properties – encouragin­g tissues to repair and regenerate.

The harvested cells are then injected directly into the knee to help reduce inflammati­on and mend damaged knee cartilage caused by arthritis. Patients can go home the same day, and go back to work the following day.

Early research carried out on 20 patients with osteoarthr­itis, and presented at the Internatio­nal Cartilage Repair Society meeting in Sorrento last September, found the £6,000 procedure reduced pain and significan­tly increased activity in most patients.

After two years, pain dropped from severe to mild and activity score increased, according to the study presented by Polish orthopaedi­c surgeon Konrad Slynarski, who has carried out more than 200 procedures since 2014.

The 90-minute technique, available privately in the UK, is called Lipogems and is carried out under local anaestheti­c. Professor Adrian Wilson, an orthopaedi­c surgeon in Harley Street, London, who is offer- ing the procedure said: ‘Body fat contains a very high concentrat­ion of perictyes – pre-stem-cells that sit in the blood vessels in fat.

‘Once they develop into stem cells they encourage the formation of new blood vessels which helps with healing. By using body fat you get 100 times more regenerati­ve cells than you would, for example, from bone marrow.’

Professor Wilson has treated 12 arthritis patients with the Lipogems technique since last November. All but one saw an improvemen­t in their condition, he says.

About 50ml of f at t i ssue is removed for each knee from the abdomen or other parts of the body such as the flank or buttocks. The cells are then placed in a ‘cocktail shaker’ type device filled with saline and shaken by hand for 30 seconds, five to ten times until the saline and fat cells separate.

Once separated, the cells are injected into the fluid-filled knee cavity using scans to direct the doctor to the site of the arthritis.

During the 24 hours after the procedure, the cells are absorbed into the fluid of the knee ready to help with healing, reducing inflammati­on and regenerati­ng cartilage.

Patients normally see an improvemen­t after four to six weeks. ‘Treat- ment of patients with arthritis normally involves weight loss, physiother­apy, steroid injections and then surgery,’ said Professor Wilson. ‘However, there is only an 80 per cent chance that surgery will work. This procedure may be suitable for patients with early or moderate disease, who don’t yet need a knee replacemen­t.’

Among the first British patients to undergo the technique is retired businessma­n Ernst Schiel, 77, from Oxshott, Surrey. The keen skier, tennis player, mountainee­r and sailor had arthritis in both knees.

HE HAD a partial knee replacemen­t privately on his left leg last year which was very successful, but was still having pain in his right knee, making walking difficult. Reluctant to offer another knee replacemen­t because Mr Schiel had suffered blood clots twice in the past, Professor Wilson suggested a Lipogems injection.

Ernst had the injections in both knees in January this year, and immediatel­y felt better.

‘From the next day onwards, I felt pain-free and could move freely like a fit 60-year-old,’ says Ernst.

‘I played tennis and golf within a week, and spent five weeks skiing without any problems.’

Dr Natalie Carter of Arthritis Research UK, said: ‘There is a desperate need for better treatment and support. But we urge caution to patients considerin­g stem cell treatments like this, as the treatment is not approved by NICE and more research is needed.’

 ??  ?? JOINT EFFORT: How an arthritic knee is soothed and healed by the fat cells
JOINT EFFORT: How an arthritic knee is soothed and healed by the fat cells

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