The use of Blood Concentrates is becoming more and more popular in the industry.
EZ PRF is the result of years of experience and study. Consequently, we’ve found what we think is the ULTIMATE blood concentrate!
LOW SPEED CENTRIFUGATION
= MORE CELLS
100% NATURAL NO ADDITIVE
= FIBRIN SCAFFOLD
EASY AS
1, 2, 3
. . .
WHAT'S THE ULTIMATE BLOOD CONCENTRATE?
WHAT MAKES EZPRF BETTER THAN TRADITIONAL PRP OR PRFM?
1.
MORE CELLS!
Not only does EZPRF contain more platelets per mcL, it also has leukocytes (WBC) & mesenchymal stem cell!
We could also call it the “Platelet, Leukocyte & Mesenchymal-stem-cells Concentrate”, but that would be a bit long, wouldn’t it? (#PLMC)
2.
FIBRIN SCAFFOLD!
The fact that the plasma actually clots into fibrin allows for a much slower release of the Growth factor and cytokines.
We have more cells, resulting in more GFs, kept alive longer and released for a much longer period of time.
HOW DO WE OBTAIN MORE CELLS?
HIGH SPEED
VS
LOW SPEED
CENTRIFUGATION:
In order to obtain PRP, it is necessary to spin the tubes at up to 6x the G-Force of the EZPRF process.
The idea of the high spin method is to eliminate all Red Blood Cells (RBC), by pushing them down with gravitational force.
It’s a good idea, but spinning it too fast, for too long, PRP methods also eliminate the cells that we DO want.
HOW DOES FIBRIN FORM?
NO ANTICOAGULANT!
HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE?
We’re only using about 1/10th of the volume collected. And because we’re spinning at a very low G-Force, the platelet recovery is very close to 100%!
Below, we’re explaining why claims of 5x the concentration while using up to 1/2 of the collected volume is mathematically impossible!
WHAT ABOUT LEUKOCYTES?
There seems to be a debate in the scientific community about the White Blood Cells and their effect on the healing process. You’ll get a different conclusion depending on who’s financing the study.
We are creating what’s called a controlled inflammatory response and leukocytes are the cells associated with inflammatory response.
THE TRUTH ABOUT PRP CLAIMS
When PRP companies measure their platelet concentration, they usually use the bottom of their concentrate, the closest possible to the separating gel.
We’ve discussed earlier that spinning too fast sends the cells to the bottom. It also creates an imbalanced concentrate. The higher we collect, the less concentrated.
- The bottom 1/3 can generally be considered PRP
- The top 2/3 actually is PPP (Platelet Poor Plasma)
So even if you’re still collecting PRP, we’d recommend to use only the bottom 1/3 above the gel (On a 10ml tube, that’s about 2cc). Otherwise you’re diluting your solution with pure plasma (water)