Ovarian recovery via autologous platelet-rich plasma: New benchmarks for condensed cytokine applications to reverse reproductive aging.
E Scott SillsPublished in: Aging medicine (Milton (N.S.W)) (2022)
Health and life expectancy gains have pushed the overall number of menopausal patients to record levels. Because maternal age at first pregnancy also continues to rise, it is unsurprising that reduced birth rates are consistently reported across many populations. Both trends severely strain national demographics and present a socioeconomic challenge for which no satisfactory solution currently exists. Symptomatic menopause and infertility/miscarriage are met with standard therapies like hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and in vitro fertilization, respectively. Although these accepted interventions do supply some cover, both are expensive, low yield, and not without controversy. Meanwhile, ovarian steroid output and competent oocyte availability approach unrecoverable loss beyond age ~35 years, irrespective of treatment. Received wisdom holds that postnatal oogenesis in humans is impossible, a tenet which until recently encountered little serious confrontation. Reassessing this paradigm is overdue given proof-of-concept work on native sex steroid rejuvenation, de novo euploid oogenesis, ovulation, blastocyst development, fetal growth, and healthy term livebirths-all apparently possible with intraovarian insertion of platelet-rich plasma (PRP). Discrete functional analysis of the full platelet-derived cytokine array carried with PRP unfortunately for now, is incomplete. Here, selected platelet releasate constituents and measured effects are framed to address advances in wellness and women's health. Emphasis is on cytokines best positioned to enable recovery of senescent ovarian function sufficient to suspend synthetic HRT dependency and/or permit egg retrieval and pregnancy. Whereas the chronicle of progress in other clinical fields does invite generalization of fresh platelet applications to reproductive endocrinology, basic mechanistic questions remain open.
Keyphrases
- platelet rich plasma
- pregnancy outcomes
- replacement therapy
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- public health
- healthcare
- end stage renal disease
- preterm birth
- ejection fraction
- preterm infants
- mental health
- chronic kidney disease
- pregnant women
- smoking cessation
- health information
- newly diagnosed
- gestational age
- peritoneal dialysis
- minimally invasive
- prognostic factors
- patient reported outcomes
- high resolution
- tyrosine kinase
- type diabetes
- climate change
- insulin resistance
- human health
- risk assessment
- stem cells
- body mass index
- single cell
- skeletal muscle
- metabolic syndrome
- combination therapy
- weight loss
- patient reported