Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation (HSCT) is a regenerative medicine procedure that harvests a patient's own stem cells from bone marrow, temporarily suppresses the immune system with chemotherapy, and reintroduces the stem cells to rebuild a new, functional immune system. Originally developed for leukemia treatment, HSCT has shown remarkable success rates of 82-94% for autoimmune conditions like Multiple Sclerosis, with patients experiencing significant improvements in quality of life, including reduced symptoms, improved mobility, and enhanced cognitive function. The therapy works by resetting the immune system to eliminate autoimmune attacks while preserving the body's natural healing capacity.
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Stem Cell Therapy Helps Multiple Sclerosis With Adia Med Founder Larry PowaliszAdded:
Hi, I'm Dr. Asa and this show is about your health and your life. It's about helping you make the right kind of choices every single day for your health and for your life. It's also to help you reach your potential and become the best version of you. Are you ready? Let's go.
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>> My name is Larry Palace. I'm from Milwaukee, Wisconsin when I was 13 years old. Moved to Winter Park, Florida. Been down here for almost 50 years now.
>> All right, Larry. Thanks for being on the show.
>> Thanks for inviting me on the show.
>> Yeah, I'm super excited. So, let's talk about Adamed and Advita. like what got you into this whole field of stem cell therapy? It's this it's been around for a little while, but you've kind of come in at a really good time, I think, where we needed somebody to really dig in. So, how did that happen?
>> So, 2021, I was diagnosed with multiple scerosis >> and it was about 8 months after I got married, remarried, and I was like, um, I can't have this happen in my life. I was told, um, so it's about 5 and a half years ago, I'd be in a wheelchair within 3 to 5 years. Wow. I was called primary progressive MS. That is the worst MS to have. I was going downhill very quickly.
My whole side it kind of looked like I had was having a stroke or had a stroke where my whole side was numb. Okay. Um brain fog. I could not focus. I couldn't write a check because I couldn't use my hand. Um so I was about ready to lose everything. And the neurologist said, "Ah, you have to take ochre." That's that's the only answer. Okay. And ochre when I did the research on it is a uh B blocker. It blocks half of your immune system. and uh respiratory problems and I was a smoker um back then >> and uh it didn't make any sense everything they said there's a chance of cancer there's all these negative things every pharmaceutical has a negative effect right there's always some side effects right >> so um I started doing research I found in Russia and in Mexico they're doing what's called HSCT that's where they stimulate the stem cells from your bone marrow bring it to your blood take the stem cells out of your blood give you um four dos of chemotherapy to remove your immune system. So, it's not like a cancer treatment. It's not that much.
That's it's not myoplasive. It's not so aggressive. Okay?
>> They just want to remove your immune system, put your stem cells back in, give you a new immune system. And that's what I had done. And that's been almost four years ago now, and I've never had relapse, no new lesions. I've had a reduction.
>> You would never ever know that you ever had any kind of condition like that.
>> Well, thank you. The only problem I still have is dropping foot in the left leg because you can't repair every nerve. No, >> but I'm so grateful so many of the nerves did come back and now that I'm doing stem cells every four months, I'm getting even more feel in my leg. So, it's coming back even more. So, to answer your question is when I was not in a wheelchair and I came back and I have a beautiful wife that is, you know, um supporting me. We're in the process of trying to have a child. That's amazing. I couldn't let the MS get in my way. Okay. So, when I came back, I was like, I'm not in a wheelchair. I've got to do something for other people. Most people didn't know about this or they couldn't afford it, right?
>> Okay. So, the first thing I did, I created a nonprofit, MSL the world, and we tried getting donations to send people to Mexico and I sent two people, paid part of their we didn't get enough donations to pay for full their full treatments. I paid for part of their treatments.
>> So, um I said, "Look, this is not enough." And that was about a year and a half later. I'm like, "It's not enough.
I'm not doing enough to help people."
>> So, um my friend had a public company.
He said, "Look, I'm getting rid of it."
I acquired it. It happened be called a denutrition. I'm like, "Well, that's interesting. It's a dutrition." And it kind of ties to what I'm thinking, right?
>> So, I took that company um which is um it's called an OTC pink sheet at the time. We uplisted it to QB. We'll be my hope is to be NASDAQ within the next year, year and a half. That means we're like a Microsoft. We're like a Tesla.
That's my goal >> because once we get that far, then nobody can stop us.
>> And that was why I thought going public was the best choice. Um you have better funding. Um it's easier to do things. um it just it just makes more sense to me.
So um >> so he said you can acquire this company and then you saw it as what? You saw it as something that could really >> the opportunity to to expand on that company. So we went from a diet nutrition which is the parent company.
We opened a damed DMED's medical company. The only thing I was going to do there was HSCT because >> which is what you had done.
>> That's correct. Okay. So you can do that in United States. Insurance companies will pay for it but nobody knew it.
Okay. Um, so one of the first things I had to do um to to get get it approved is I I hired lawyers to contact the FDA and see what they said about using HSCT in the US. Well, because of your own stem cells, there's no law against it.
Okay. Because the chemo products are considered off label, okay? Um, a doctor has to has the right to use off label products. So there's no restrictions to it. Okay. Um, at first insurance wasn't going to pay for it, but now there's been over 10,000 cases worldwide.
>> So, insurance will pay for that >> in we'll say private. Medicare, Medicaid still won't. Okay. Um, a lot of privates will. You have to fight with them. But anytime you can improve the quality of life, they have to cover it.
>> Quality of life is the most important thing. You can't say no to quality of life.
>> If we say that, hey, we can um >> give you a little bit longer life. Well, that's not quality of life. if I can take your life and make it be better that you can possibly walk again or you don't need as many medications or um you can you can work again cuz so many people with MS have to lose quit their jobs. They there's no way they can work, >> right?
>> So within these cases that I studied before I had HSCT done, I found there was an 82% success rate in Mexico, a 94% success rate in Russia.
>> So in our clinic, um we're just about ready to start HSCT there. Um, we're going to be using the Russian protocol, slightly modified by our doctors, um, but it should have a 92 to 94% success rate, which is insane.
>> It is.
>> Okay. Um, so anyway, in doing this with the FDA, we got a letter back saying you can do this, but you can't use umbilical cord stem cells. Like, why would they say that?
>> So, on that note, talk about that for a minute. So, in stem cell therapy, there is a there's a big challenge I think a lot of people have with the FDA and what you can claim and what you can't say and what you can do. Like in Florida right now, they just passed a law in 2025 in July. Yep.
>> Where it made it legal to do stem cell therapy, which is amazing for us cuz our clinics and our companies are here in Florida.
>> Correct.
>> So, talk about the challenges when you acquired the company and you and Adia Nutrition is you're moving it forward.
you've got a DMED. What did you see with the FDA and what was the hurdle that you said, "Okay, we have to create something to work with them or to show them what was that about like how >> So, first of all, using your own stem cells is okay with the FDA. They're not going to interfere. Um, the doctor can practice medicine. They can use off label products as well. So, HSC HCT was not a big deal when it's your own stem cells." Okay. But when I was researching after that comment they made, I'm like there must be >> what was the comment?
>> You cannot use umbilical cord stem cells for HSCT. They must be the person's >> and and what is HSCT say just what does that stand for?
>> I can't give you the exact um definition of it because it's been a long day but basically um it's uh hemopetic is using your own cells okay um to replace your immune system is what it is. And that's originally was designed for leukemia, but that would be um to where it was with donor cells, not your own cells.
Okay? Um and you can use donor cells if it's leukemia. So bottom line is the doctor Richard Bert that that created HSCT for MS, right?
>> He was leukemia. He was doing a lot of leukemia treatments. He said, "I wonder why we couldn't use this for other um illnesses, for other autoimmune conditions." And sure enough, he did, I think, six different autoimmune conditions. He did ALS. He did Crohn's disease. He did MS. Um he did all these different things and they all were successful.
>> Um and it's interesting that it's taken this long. That was 16 years ago he started this. It's taken this long to say, "Okay, I guess we can let them try it, right?"
>> So then going to um umbilical cord to birth um stem cells. I started re researching all the different cells out there and what I found, let's give you Panama for example, okay? Because you can go to Panama, right? Everybody thought, "Oh, we're going to go to Panama or go to Mexico, right? Those are grown meenymal cells. They put them in a petri dish and they expand them. Okay.
The problem with that, as I learned, and understand I'm not a doctor, but I can I know how to do research, right? And I know it makes common sense.
>> When you're growing a cell in a petri dish, >> you're you now have a parent and you've built the siblings and they keep reproducing reproducing by billions.
Okay? They get weaker and weaker and weaker. I don't even know what stage they're on is how long how many times they reproduce them. Right? So you're not doing with a pure cell, you're doing with siblings. Okay? Um and in doing that they they can mutate and become something else besides a normal cell. So I wouldn't ever want to do that, but yet that's the biggest thing in the world right now. Okay?
>> Looking at meenchyminal cells or we'll call them tissue cells. Um tissue cells would be using the umbilical cord and the placenta and you grind it, you press it, you take that liquid out and that's your product. You filter it, that's your product. Okay. Um, so messenymal do have growth factors. They have certain things. They can help repair cartilage or help repair bone. They can do that, but they're missing other proteins and growth factors that the blood stem cells have. And that's what I found is I found one company, okay? They're out of Miami, okay?
>> They are minimal manipulated because that's one of the rules for the FDA. You can't add chemicals. Um, you can't do certain processes that could change the structure of the cell. So all they do is they buy the blood from blood banks from C-section burst only. Okay. The blood bank has done all the testing, hepatitis, all these different everything and from that point um they take them and they just use a centrifuge and they take the stem cells out and the exoomes out >> and then they have a way to stimulate the stem cells to create higher exosomes than anybody else. So, so, so with a damed and a diita and the product itself, what is the difference between other stem cell companies and a dvita, the product itself? So, talk about like the the number of exoomes versus the amount of stem cells per vial that would go into a treatment.
>> Right. So, one of our competitors um their their number one product only has 60 to 70 billion exosomes, no stem cells. Okay? But that's their main product that they're selling, >> which sounds like a lot. It does sound like a lot until you get to the trillions, right?
>> Then it sounds like a lot, right? So within our um Advita, it has 100 million stem cells and three trillion with a T exoomes. Okay.
>> Um even after thaw, it's guaranteed 70% living because the new law in Florida required you have to do a COA that includes the vitality after thaw, >> which is so important.
>> It is. And I don't know anybody else that that gives you that number.
>> Yeah. They can give you that kind of number.
>> None of my competitors even have that. I don't know how they're getting away with not having that >> cuz you have to know how many are alive, right? That's what's going to work, right?
>> So anyway, so minimal is huge. Okay. Um everything natural c-section. Um to me it makes sense because there's less chance of bacteria as compared to a natural child birth. Back in like 2018, there was a company that was doing na uh natural child births and they had bacteria in their um and I'm not saying it was just because of the birth, but they had bacteria and they had problems.
And I think these are some of the problems with why stem cells were slow.
You had a person in the FDA called um Peter Marx. Okay, he literally was trying to shut everybody down with stem cells. Have no idea why he was doing that. But what's interesting is when he resigned um last year, what's first thing he did? He went to work for a pharmaceutical company. kind of tells you what he was doing, right? Slowing down natural. Okay.
>> I I believe there's a place for for pharmaceuticals. Absolutely there is.
Okay. Um and I believe some of the pharmaceuticals we could use to help ours. Okay. The ones with the least side effects, the ones that aren't addicting.
Okay. Those kind of those kind of pharmaceuticals.
>> So, um in my belief, I believe you're better off repairing. Okay? And that's what stem cells do. They repair. Your body when you're a kid has young cells.
You will cut yourself. You're healed so quickly. Three, three, four days, you're completely healed.
>> As you get older, those cells get older.
You get less of them. Okay? That's what causes wrinkles. That's what causes all the pains, all the inflammation because our stem cells aren't doing what they used to do. So, taking um birth stem cells and exoomes gives you that chance again to repair fast. Okay. I have a 94 year old mentor. All right. We gave him stem cells. um we're trying to improve his COPD and it it helps but we noticed and he he first thing he noticed every time he hit his arm on anything he would turn black and blue and white. Okay.
>> And it would take him a week or two to repair.
>> Now if he does something like that it repairs in a day or two.
>> That's amazing.
>> His cat clawed him on a Thursday and I saw this big red >> which for 94 year old skin would be super thin and just rip right through it and take forever.
>> Exactly. Yeah.
>> So by that following Monday it's all gone. He has two lines from a cat where the cat scratched them. That was it. So within 4 days.
>> That's amazing.
>> It is amazing.
>> So talk about with the with the di like you were talking about the messenymal versus the blood, >> right?
>> And why that's such a differentiator and and in this field as it's growing and emerging that really has become a gold standard that not everyone does.
>> That's correct.
>> So talk about that. Hemopoetic um cells, so blood cells, okay, have more proteins, more growth factors than MSE's. MSE's work. And don't get me wrong, you're going to stand for >> meenymal stem cells, tissue cells. Okay?
And best way to say is tissue.
>> So we got tissue cells and we have blood cells.
>> That's correct.
>> Right. Advita focuses on blood cells, which is more powerful than the tissue cells >> in in all of our studies so far. Yes, that is correct.
>> And the reason is you're talking one type of cell. You're talking an MSE messenymal cell, right? When you're talking blood, you have messenymal cells in them. So for the out of the 100 million, 1% of them are messenymal.
Well, that's a million cells. That's a lot. Okay. But now you're talking other factors. And again, I'm not a doctor, but they gave me a list of all the different proteins, all the different growth factors that meenyal cells don't have.
>> So why wouldn't you do something that has a chance to repair a lot of other things your body? So it's not just um I'll give you an example. We've done a treatment on a patient where they were saying they had rheumatoid arthritis, okay, but they also had a blood pressure problem, okay? Regular blood pressure.
We're helping them with the rheumatoid arthritis, but that blood pressure gets corrected. So, it's doing more than one thing, okay? The more things in your body wrong, the more treatment you need, right? That's right. Because it's going to look for the bit most inflammation and the the worst problem at the beginning and then repair that first.
Okay? And then it'll start repairing other things. And remember these kind of cells stay in your body for 6 months. If if your body likes them and here's the the strange thing about stem cells, right? If your body accepts them and likes them, they become part of you.
Okay? And they continue growing and they'll grow up to up to six months.
Missenal cells can't do that. Men kyal cells um absorb in your body within 3 days. Okay? And nobody's ever said that.
Nobody ever talks about that. That's super important.
>> They can't because that's what they're primarily using for their product. And so you don't want to talk to the downside at all.
>> True. Correct.
>> Right. So if you've got more living in in the blood, which we do, >> it's almost like taking a singular vitamin versus a multivitamin. The multivitamin is going to cover >> everything in the body, right? The singular vitamin is good and it'll work for whatever that singular vitamin needs to work for, >> right? But >> but it's not covering the whole gamut.
And so the blood stem cells are really covering everything as much as it can cover. That's correct. that's possible within the body. Right?
>> So that's interesting. So in the field of regenerative medicine with where we are now, where do you see stem cell therapy going?
>> So we're doing all these studies right now and we're seeing tremendous results.
Okay. We did one-off studies for autistic children last year. We did four children and every one of them had a a significant improvement. Um two of them were that I was talking about to a few doctors um yesterday. Um I did a I did a Zoom call with them. The one child um so um we do what's called an a tech study.
Basically it it determines from 0 to 180 where they're on the spectrum. Right?
>> The one 11year-old girl was at a 111 which is pretty high. That's like a three on the spectrum. Right?
>> By the time she was done she was at 44.
>> So it's like a 67 point adjustment uh improvement.
>> That's huge.
>> So when we're doing a study we're starting this I'll explain to you in a second. Um, according to general studies, a 10point improvement is success. Okay? And we're talking that one had a 60 some point improvement.
>> Another little six-year-old boy, 44 point improvement. That's insane.
>> But think about that for a minute. Think about the quality of life change.
>> Correct.
>> Not just for the I mean, for the child, it's amazing because it's life-changing, >> right? But for the parent, >> but the parent who carries the weight of what they're seeing in their child.
>> Yes. Exactly.
>> I mean, 12% would be great, 15% would be great, right?
>> But to see 65, 67%, whatever, that's >> huge.
>> Life-changing for everyone.
>> Exactly. So, because of the results last year, >> um we had Dr. um Dr. Evan Thomas, he's our medical director. He's done other studies in the past. He said, "Larry, let's do a study on this. I really want to see what it does to 100 kids." Okay.
So, we um applied for an IRB, institutional review board. Um they validated safety. They Well, first we sent them a draft. Okay.
>> And you're going to do this study on on autism.
>> Autistic children age 3 to 12 because that's what we did last year. That was their age brackets. Um we'll probably do a third leg going from 13 and beyond because I've already been getting calls from parents saying, "Well, my my kid's 15, my kid's 20. I'd still like to do something."
>> And there's a cost for the study, right, for parents >> in this case for Yes. Let me explain why that is. Okay.
>> So, if you get a grant, it takes you 3 to 5 years. If you have the government backing it, it takes they all get control of it. Okay.
>> They create the narrative for what goes on.
>> Yes. So, >> you wanted to hold on and make sure >> that it was the best that you could make it >> for the parents, for the child, for everyone involved.
>> Correct. And I want to I want to have the results be honest. I don't want them saying, "Well, we're not going to accept this. We're not going to accept that."
The institution review board does that for us. We don't need the government to do it or some grant company to say, you know, they >> not that they're going to be dishonest, but we want to make sure >> we don't want to take the chance. That's all it means. And and time to get any grant. You're talking time. Okay. I don't think we should waste any more time. We're saying one in 31 kids now have autism. That's insane.
>> Okay. Makes no sense at all. Okay.
>> Whether that's environmental, whether that's a vaccine, we don't know what it exactly is, but if we can solve it, it won't be as big of a deal anymore, right? Um so what we did is we did a test using glutathione. Glutathione is an antitoxin. It removes toxins from the body. Um one of our doctors was using that for autism and getting some good results. Other doctors were using arsena and they were getting good results. I said look let's all have a meeting. The one problem with glutathione it only stays in your body for an hour or two from the time they do an IV. Okay. But it does take the toxin out an hour or two. So I'm like okay what else can we do? So, one of the doctors said, "Well, there's a um a topical that you can put on your body um for on put on the child um twice a day and within 3 days it stays in their body." Now, we're constantly fighting toxins and give them stem cells. So, that's the study. Study is one side will get glutathione only with the topical, the other side with glutathione with stem cells. There's a phase two. Any child that only got glutathione will be guaranteed stem cells for the second phase.
>> I want all kids to have the same fair.
Um, I want to be fair to all of them, okay? I don't want one side doing better than the other side never doing as good.
So, that's what we're doing three. And it gives the answer of all three. Was it the stem cell? Was it the glutathione?
Or was it both combined?
>> I believe it's going to be both combined. That that's what I believe, but we'll see.
>> That's what the stud is about.
>> Love it. So, so talk to me about the study that you're doing with autism and and there is a cost, right, for to for doing the study. And you're doing that so you can maintain the control of it and that the the results are honest. So what does that cost like to a parent?
>> Right. So typically if we were doing just any one treatment be $8,000. If you go to any um other clinic that does any type of treatment $8,000 minimum. Okay.
>> Um we're doing each treatment for the child for $4,000. So a dement's taking a loss. Okay.
>> Um it's we can't take all that loss because we are a public company. We do have to address the shareholders. So, we're going to take some loss and the shareholders have to be okay with that, right?
>> Um, but the idea is that if we get this proven, we get this 100 children, maybe the other 100 children for 13 and older, then we we force insurance companies to pay for it from that point on.
>> If we get the results, I'm hoping I'm hoping for a 70 to 80% success rate.
Now, I talked to a doctor this morning.
He thinks we'll have over 90% success rate because he's been doing studies as well. And if we could get that kind of a success rate, what insurance company can be say no to the quality of life, right?
Remember, you're not just giving quality of life to the kid, you're giving to the parents, too. And you're talking millions of dollars per per child because they can never take care of themselves. What we're proposing is if this works the way we hope it's going to work, the child will be able to start taking care of themselves. That's >> there's a doctor in Jacksonville, um I won't tell you his name because I'm not don't know if he'll allow me to tell his name. His child is now 24 and can take care of himself and he treat them with stem cells.
>> Okay.
>> And that's the exact same thing we had the conversation blood. He's using blood stem cells. Okay. I believe that is the magic that nobody does.
>> And and with the blood stem cells what you found in the different treatments that IV therapy is now becoming a centerpiece and that's how you're treating the autism the doctors are.
>> So talk about that and why the IV is another option. how it floods the system. You were telling me >> correct. Correct. So, we're going to do another study, another study for lower back pain. And the question is, do we have to inject in the lower back areas or can we just do IV? I believe the IV is going to be better because think about what we do is we we basically give you um 8 cc's of of injectable saline to flush your veins. Then we give you a 5minute push of a diita and then 10 more cc's of saline. We've just hit your entire body, okay, with stem cells and exoomes and a 100 million stem cells and three trillion exoomes going through your whole body. So it's looking for all the places that are damaged, okay?
Remember the exosomes are the communicators of the stem cells. They tell the stem cells what to do. So the reason we're doing three trillion of them give those stem cells that we just put in your body and your own stem cells a boost and say, "Hey, we got all these problems, guys. Let's go fix all these problems." Right? So, that's what I I really believe that study for lower back pain is going to show us a better result with just an IV. And we I can tell you for every treatment that we're doing except for um orthopedic, it's an IV. If you have rheumatoid arthritis, I'm not going to inject where your pain is. I'm going to give you an IV.
>> Um I was telling you, I think earlier uh earlier today, we had a woman, her hand was like this. She could not open her hand. It it would hurt too bad and it was locked. Okay? She did the IV. Within an hour of her sitting talking to the nurse and the nurse practitioner and the doctor, her hands doing this.
>> She goes, "Oh my god." She started crying.
>> It's amazing >> because her hands moving. It's It's insane.
>> But you know, in a moment like that, when you see these kind of results, what's that worth? You know, what's what's that what is that worth to someone?
>> Right. It's worth >> when you spend $8,000 for a treatment or $12,000 for a study for a child, what is that worth for the quality of life?
>> Right. Right. Well, the saying is um health is a new wealth, right? And it is, right? And my hope is I I hate that people all that not everybody can afford it. So my hope is that if we can do this over the next couple years, get insurance to be >> That's what I'm saying. That's why you're doing the studies. That's why you're you're going public. That's why you're building the company out to not just be a side thing. You want it to be a major player. Yep. in the stem cell world, in the regenerative medicine world to say, "Hey, Adamed, Advita, we're here. We're here to stay, and we're here to make a difference."
Exactly. I think the biggest part that what I'm hearing of everything that you're saying is that you want to be a company that literally goes in and makes a difference in people's health, in their lives, for families, and to change generations.
>> That is exactly right. That's my my mission for the rest of my life because I'm not in a wheelchair right now. Okay.
I have to pay it forward. you know, all the years I I was a real estate investor. I have a lot of passive income. I was retired, okay? But I wasn't thinking about other people as much. Now that I'm not in a wheelchair, I think of what if I was and what if this person that couldn't afford the treatment I had done cuz that was an expensive treatment. Okay, we've got to look at everybody now and see I don't want to just help this person help all of them. You know, >> that's that's where I am right now.
That's the way I think. And I love the child when every time I saw a mother cry because the child spoke because these were non um the six was non-vocal. Okay, six was s sensitive to touch. Okay, the mother within a week after treatment, okay, calls me and he said, "I'm sorry."
Okay, kid. Those kids don't understand emotion. The way I describe um a lot of children with autism um especially especially high up on the spectrum, it's like they can't hear. They're in their own world. Okay. And if we can get them out of their world into ours, isn't that like huge?
>> So that that's the way I see it. And every time I talk to any parent, even when I talk to a a person that had rheumatoid arthritis and start moving, you're seeing them crying, getting choked up or the husband choked up, his wife can do something again. It's touching as heck. I mean, that's every moment I get that I get that happening again. You know, another burst of oh my god, this happened again. It's like a miracle every time you see.
>> Miracle every time. So, what would you say to anyone that's considering stem cell therapy, right? They've they've read about it, they've seen it. What is what is a final thought you would give to someone that's really considering it?
>> Yeah. The first thing I would tell you is don't spend the kind of money you would spend offshore because they're more expensive than here. Um, it can be done in the United States. In Florida, especially in Florida, you can do orthopedic pain management, wound repair, which is almost everything. I mean, if you have pain, we can treat you, right? You could tell me you have pain for um arthritis, you have pain for whatever it is, right? We can treat you for it. Um the biggest thing I would also say is do your research. Make ask the questions. So if you go if you're going to go somewhere, how many stem cells? How many are guaranteed living?
Okay? Do you use exoomes? Because exoomes are important. Okay? What things are you getting? And just just don't make sure you're not just getting fluff.
when they're saying LED lights, okay, and you're going to be there for a day, that's not long enough for LED lights.
You need a lot longer time for that. Um, hyperbaric chamber does have a positive some positive effects. Um, but not as much as ozone, for example. They throw this big package. Oh, you can get this massage, you can get this, you can get that. Most of it's fluff.
>> Bottom line is know the product, know what it does.
>> Yes.
>> Know what's in it.
>> Correct.
>> Right. And don't go out of the country if you come right here to Florida.
>> That's correct.
>> Larry, thanks for being on the show.
You're welcome. Thank you.
>> Always great having you. Yep. Thanks for >> That's why we're partnering with you and our clinic and taking this message around the world.
>> That's great. Great. And your clinic is going to be amazing.
>> Yeah.
>> Thank you.
>> Yeah.
>> Awesome.
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