I built Regen ATX because the practice I wanted to send my own patients to didn't exist.
Not a wellness spa with a physician's signature on the intake form. Not a surgery center that offers PRP as an upsell because margins are better on cash pay. Something more demanding than either — a clinical environment where regenerative medicine and performance optimization are practiced with the same rigor I apply in the operating room. Where the evidence base is taken seriously, its limits are acknowledged openly, and the patient in front of me gets a real opinion rather than a menu.
The catalyst, if I'm honest, was becoming a patient myself. A recent injury requiring surgery — the kind I treat surgically in others — put me on the other side of the equation. I found myself navigating the same landscape my patients navigate: sorting legitimate emerging therapies from overpromised ones, weighing the evidence on biologics I use professionally but had never needed personally, deciding what I was willing to try and what I wasn't. There is nothing like being the patient, armed with a surgeon's knowledge and a researcher's instincts, to clarify exactly where the field is honest and where it isn't. That experience sharpened this practice considerably. It also gave me a level of informed empathy I didn't have before.
Musculoskeletal longevity is the organizing principle here. Not injury treatment in isolation — though we do that — but the longer arc of how your body ages, adapts, and either declines or doesn't. Sarcopenia begins in your thirties. Functional capacity, grip strength, lean mass, tissue repair efficiency — these track with how well you live and how long you function independently. Most medicine addresses this far too late. This practice is designed to address it at the right time, with the right tools, for patients who want to be active participants in that process.
What that requires is honesty — about what the FDA has evaluated and cleared, about what exists in a legitimate but less-regulated space, about what the current literature supports and where the evidence is thin. Informed consent here isn't a form you sign before a procedure. It's the foundation of every conversation. You will know what we know, what we don't know, and why I'm recommending what I'm recommending. If I think something isn't right for you, I'll say so — and explain why.
A single consult can change a decision. A longitudinal relationship changes a trajectory.
Most clinical encounters are episodic by design — a problem presents, a treatment is applied, the case is closed. That model works for some things. It fails entirely for musculoskeletal health, where the variables that determine outcomes — body composition, hormonal environment, sleep quality, training load, inflammatory burden — shift continuously and interact with each other in ways that a snapshot can't capture.
Regen ATX is structured around relationships that develop over time. Longer initial visits. Follow-up that's built into the protocol, not scheduled as an afterthought. Concierge plans for patients who want ongoing access, easier scheduling, and a physician who knows their history well enough to notice when something has changed. The goal is a clinical picture that deepens — not a file that gets thicker without anyone reading it.
Evidence, Honestly Interpreted
I follow the literature across regenerative medicine, performance health, and musculoskeletal longevity closely — and I'll tell you plainly what it supports, what it suggests, and where it's genuinely uncertain. FDA-cleared treatments are identified as such. Everything else is discussed in full, with the evidence on the table.
Full Informed Consent
You will understand what we're doing, why, what the realistic range of outcomes looks like, and what the alternatives are — including doing nothing. Informed consent isn't paperwork here. It's the standard of every visit.
Surgical Perspective
My frame of reference is the operating room. I know what injured tissue looks like, what healed tissue looks like, and what the biological difference between them comes down to. That context changes how I evaluate, recommend, and monitor — whether or not surgery is ever part of your care.
Longitudinal Partnership
Musculoskeletal health is a long game. The patients who do best are the ones who treat it that way — with a physician who's tracking the arc, not just the appointment. That's the relationship this practice is designed to support.
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