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The Science of Stem Cells & Tendon Healing with Chukwuweike Gwam MD

Running

The Science of Stem Cells & Tendon Healing with Chukwuweike Gwam MD

The Run Smarter Podcast›
Apr 19, 202646:55

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Episode Notes

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Stem cells are one of the most talked-about frontiers in medicine—but how much of it actually applies to runners dealing with tendon pain?

In this episode, I’m joined by orthopaedic surgeon and researcher Chukwuweike Gwam to break down the latest evidence on stem cells and tendon healing. We unpack what stem cells actually are, how they work in the body, and whether they live up to the hype when it comes to treating tendinopathy.

We also explore the real-world limitations, risks, and costs—alongside what the future might hold for regenerative medicine in running injuries.

If you’ve ever considered injections, biologics, or wondered if stem cells are ā€œthe next big thingā€ā€¦ this episode will bring you up to speed.

About Chukwuweike Gwam MD:

  • Ā Orthopaedic surgeon (USA) specialising in hip & knee reconstructionĀ 
  • Ā MD (Howard University), PhD in Molecular Medicine (Wake Forest), MBAĀ 
  • Ā Research focus: regenerative medicine, stem cells, and translational scienceĀ 
  • Ā Passion for improving healthcare access and bringing lab discoveries into real-world treatmentĀ 

Follow him on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/chukwuweike_g/

Key Topics & Insights


What Are Stem Cells (In Simple Terms)?

  • Ā Think of stem cells as the body’s ā€œrepair reserveā€
  • Ā They help regenerate tissue by:Ā 
    • Ā Creating new cellsĀ 
    • Ā Regulating inflammationĀ 
  • Ā We all have them—but:Ā 
    • Quantity decreases with age
    • Quality declines significantly

Why Do We Heal Slower As We Age?

It’s not just one factor—it’s a combination:

  • Ā Reduced stem cell quality and numberĀ 
  • Ā Slower blood vessel formationĀ 
  • Ā Reduced cellular signallingĀ 
  • Ā Increased ā€œsenescentā€ (non-functioning) cellsĀ 

In other words: your repair system is still there… just less efficient.


Stem Cells & Tendon Healing — The Theory

The idea is simple:

  1. Ā Harvest stem cells (fat, bone marrow, etc.)Ā 
  2. Ā Process themĀ 
  3. Ā Inject them into the injured tendonĀ 

The goal:

  • Ā Improve collagen structureĀ 
  • Ā Enhance healing responseĀ 
  • Ā Accelerate recoveryĀ 

But here’s the key point…

šŸ‘‰ They are NOT a magic bullet—they’re an adjunct.


What the Research Actually Shows

From their literature review (2015–2025):

  • Ā ~1,800 papers screenedĀ 
  • Ā ~150 relevant studies includedĀ 

Findings:

  • Ā Improved collagen alignment (under a microscope)Ā 
  • Ā Increased tensile strength (in animal models)Ā 
  • Ā No consistent improvement in long-term human outcomesĀ 

šŸ‘‰ Especially beyond 6–12 months, results tend to equalise.


The Most Interesting Finding

In rotator cuff studies:

  • Ā Stem cells improved early recovery (first ~6 months)
  • Ā But no long-term difference compared to standard treatmentĀ 

Why?

  • Ā Stem cells likely help regulate early inflammationĀ 
  • Ā The body eventually ā€œcatches upā€ on its ownĀ 

Why Results Are So Inconsistent

This is the biggest limitation:

No standardisation.

  • Ā Different sources (fat, bone marrow, skin)Ā 
  • Ā Different processing methodsĀ 
  • Ā Different patient health profilesĀ 

šŸ‘‰ Your stem cells ≠ someone else’s stem cells


Risks & Limitations

  • Ā Potential for tumour formation (teratomas) with certain stem cell typesĀ 
  • Ā High variability in outcomesĀ 
  • Ā Mostly animal-based evidence
  • Ā Difficult to control how cells behave once injectedĀ 

Cost vs Benefit (Reality Check)

  • Ā Stem cell injections: ~$3,000–$5,000+Ā 
  • Ā Cortisone: ~$200Ā 
  • Ā Rehab: far cheaper, highly effectiveĀ 

In most cases:
Ā You’re paying a premium for uncertain benefit.

What About PRP?

  • Ā Some benefit for:Ā 
    • Ā Tennis elbowĀ 
    • Ā Chronic tendinopathyĀ 
  • Ā But:Ā 
    • Ā Highly variableĀ 
    • Ā Not clearly superior to rehabĀ 

Again, works best alongside loading—not instead of it.


Practical Takeaways (For Runners)

  • Ā Stem cells are promising—but not ready for prime time (yet)
  • Ā They may:Ā 
    • Ā Speed up early recoveryĀ 
    • Ā Improve tissue quality (in theory)Ā 
  • Ā But:Ā 
    • Ā Don’t outperform rehab long-termĀ 
    • Ā Are expensive and inconsistentĀ 

The fundamentals still win:

  • Ā Progressive loadingĀ 
  • Ā Smart trainingĀ 
  • Ā PatienceĀ 
  • Ā šŸ“² Follow Dr. Gwam: https://www.instagram.com/chukwuweike_g/

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