Innovative Regenerative Therapies Accessible
Expert treatment for chronic wounds (30+ days) not healing with standard care—diabetic ulcers, pressure wounds, venous ulcers, surgical wounds, traumatic wounds. Advanced debridement, NPWT, skin substitutes, biofilm disruption, infection management. Medicare Part B covered mobile wound care in Beverly Hills, Orange County, Los Angeles, San Fernando Valley, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and Kern County.
30 days. That's how long a normal wound should take to heal with standard care. If your wound is still open beyond 30 days, something is blocking the healing process—and we need to find out what.
2-3 Weeks
Normal healing time for healthy individuals
30+ Days
Officially becomes a "chronic" non-healing wound
6.5 Million
Americans living with chronic wounds right now
Normal wound healing is a precise four-stage process: (1) Stop the bleeding → (2) Clear infection & inflammation → (3) Build new tissue → (4) Strengthen and close. In chronic wounds, this process gets stuck at Stage 2—the inflammatory phase. Your wound is trapped in an endless loop of inflammation, unable to move forward to tissue regeneration.
Hemostasis (Minutes)
Clotting stops bleeding
Inflammation (Days 1-6)
Immune cells clean wound, remove debris
Proliferation (Days 4-21)
New tissue grows, wound closes
Remodeling (Weeks-Months)
Scar strengthens, full healing
Timeline: 2-3 weeks for complete wound closure in healthy individuals
Hemostasis ✓
Completed
Inflammation (STUCK HERE)
Endless inflammation loop—cannot progress
Proliferation (LOCKED)
Cannot build new tissue
Remodeling (LOCKED)
Cannot reach healing
Timeline: 30+ days and counting with no progress—requires intervention to break the cycle
The Key Question
Your wound is stuck in the inflammatory phase. Something is preventing your body from moving to Stage 3 (tissue building). To fix this, we need to identify the "suspect" blocking healing—then neutralize it with targeted treatment.
Like a detective investigating a crime, we need to identify which factor (or combination of factors) is preventing your wound from healing. Here are the most common "suspects":
Found in: 80% of chronic wounds
The Evidence:
Why It Blocks Healing:
Bacteria form a protective "biofilm" shield that standard antibiotics can't penetrate. The biofilm creates chronic inflammation and produces toxins that destroy new tissue as fast as your body tries to build it.
Treatment: Aggressive debridement to physically remove biofilm + targeted antimicrobial dressings + culture-directed antibiotics
Found in: Diabetics, PAD patients, arterial ulcers
The Evidence:
Why It Blocks Healing:
Blood delivers oxygen, nutrients, and immune cells needed for repair. Blocked or damaged blood vessels starve the wound of these essential building blocks. Without adequate circulation, healing is impossible.
Treatment: Vascular assessment → restore blood flow if possible → stem cell therapy to promote angiogenesis (new blood vessel growth)
Found in: Pressure ulcers, diabetic ulcers, arterial wounds
The Evidence:
Why It Blocks Healing:
Dead tissue is a breeding ground for bacteria and physically blocks healthy tissue from growing. Your body cannot heal through dead tissue—it must be removed first to expose the viable wound base beneath.
Treatment: Surgical/sharp debridement to remove all necrotic tissue → enzymatic debridement for ongoing cleaning → advanced dressings to promote granulation
Found in: Diabetes, kidney disease, malnutrition, immunosuppression
The Evidence:
Why It Blocks Healing:
These conditions impair your body's ability to mount an effective healing response. High blood sugar damages immune cells, medications suppress healing, and malnutrition deprives your body of the raw materials needed for tissue repair.
Treatment: Optimize diabetes control → nutritional support → address medication effects → regenerative therapies to compensate for impaired healing capacity
Found in: Pressure ulcers, diabetic foot ulcers
The Evidence:
Why It Blocks Healing:
Your body tries to build new tissue, but ongoing pressure or friction destroys it before it can mature and strengthen. It's like trying to build a house while someone keeps knocking it down—you can never make progress.
Treatment: Offloading devices (special boots, cushions) → pressure redistribution → protect wound from trauma → allow uninterrupted healing
Once we identify which suspect(s) are blocking healing, we neutralize them with targeted interventions—then add regenerative therapies to "jump-start" your body out of the inflammatory phase and into tissue-building mode.
Regenerative therapies release concentrated growth factors that signal your body to exit the inflammatory phase and enter tissue-building mode:
The Key to Success
Standard wound care just keeps changing dressings, hoping the wound eventually heals. Regenerative medicine actively intervenes to break the stuck cycle. That's why Medicare covers these advanced treatments after 30 days—because they work when standard care fails.
Diabetic Foot Ulcers
Most common chronic wound in diabetics
Pressure Ulcers
From prolonged immobility/bed rest
Venous Leg Ulcers
Due to poor vein circulation
Arterial Ulcers
From blocked arteries/PAD
Surgical Wounds
Post-operative dehiscence/non-healing
Traumatic Wounds
From accidents or injuries
If your wound has been open for 30+ days, you qualify for advanced regenerative treatments covered by Medicare Part B. Let's find out what's blocking your healing—and fix it.