Needle Fat Harvest for Stem Cells: Why 0.1g Is Enough (No Scalpel)
Science

Needle Fat Harvest for Stem Cells: Why 0.1g Is Enough (No Scalpel)

Most stem cell programs use surgical fat extraction. Rakan collects just 0.1g by needle — enough to culture a full therapeutic dose. Here is why the method matters for recovery and safety.

|7 min read

简要回答

Most adipose stem cell programs use a scalpel incision to remove dozens of grams of abdominal fat. At Rakan Clinic Tokyo, proprietary micro-culture allows therapeutic doses from just 0.1g collected by needle — roughly one to two grains of rice — with same-day discharge and no sutures. The in-house licensed CPC is what makes minimal harvest viable.

Fat harvest is the step patients underestimate until they see the comparison: a surgical mini-liposuction versus a needle aspiration you walk away from with a band-aid. The collection method affects pain, downtime, scarring risk, and whether you can fly home on schedule.

What Typical Clinics Do

Conventional adipose stem cell programs often use a scalpel incision into the abdomen or flank, remove 20–100+ grams of fat, close with sutures, and require days of local wound care. Infection risk, bruising, and visible scarring at the harvest site are real considerations — especially for medical tourists on tight itineraries.

The Needle-Only Approach

Rakan Clinic Tokyo Azabudai collects approximately 0.1g of adipose tissue using a proprietary needle technique — no scalpel, no incision, no sutures. The procedure takes about 30–40 minutes of chair time. Many guests complete collection and return to their hotel the same day with only a small dressing.

The sample goes directly to the licensed in-clinic Cell Processing Center, where cells are expanded over the culture window to produce a defined therapeutic dose for IV and/or joint delivery.

Why So Little Tissue Can Work

Same-day reinjection clinics need large fat volumes because they do not expand cells — they inject whatever MSC count is present immediately. Culture expansion multiplies a tiny starting sample into hundreds of millions of cells over weeks in controlled CPC conditions.

That is the scientific trade-off: minimal harvest discomfort now, culture time later, higher defined dose at reinfusion.

Safety and Recovery Comparison

  • Surgical harvest: sutures, multi-day downtime, higher scarring risk, more analgesia
  • Needle harvest: band-aid, same-day discharge, minimal bruising for most patients
  • Both require sterile technique; Japan's CPC framework adds documented chain-of-custody
  • International flyers benefit from avoiding abdominal wound care mid-itinerary

What Patients Should Ask Any Clinic

Before booking, ask: How many grams of fat do you remove? Is expansion performed in a licensed CPC or outsourced? What dose per IV or joint site is quoted after culture? Can I see the provision plan registered under Japan's regenerative medicine framework?

Harvest method is not a marketing detail — it shapes your first visit experience and whether 'stem cell tourism' feels like outpatient care or minor surgery.

Who May Not Be Suitable

Very low body fat, active infection, certain medications, or inability to complete a two-visit culture schedule may make harvest inappropriate. Physicians decline when medicine requires it — regardless of travel plans.

常见问题

Is needle fat harvest painful?

Most patients report mild discomfort comparable to a cosmetic injection procedure. Local anesthesia is used. Many return to normal activities the same day with only a small dressing.

Why do other clinics remove so much more fat?

Clinics that reinject same-day concentrates without culture need larger volumes to obtain enough cells immediately. Cultured protocols expand a tiny sample over weeks in a CPC.

Is 0.1g really enough for stem cell therapy?

For culture-expanded therapy at a licensed CPC, yes — the expansion step produces defined high doses from a minimal starting sample. Dose is confirmed in your release documentation.

Will I have a visible scar?

Needle collection avoids scalpel incisions and sutures. Most guests have no significant scar — only a tiny entry point that heals quickly.

Does minimal harvest affect cell quality?

Quality depends on CPC processing, culture conditions, and release testing — not on removing large fat volumes. Japan's framework requires documented handling and viability standards.

Ready to Learn More?

Schedule a consultation with our specialists to discuss how stem cell therapy can help you. Learn whether adipose stem cells are right for your joint condition.

Needle Fat Harvest for Stem Cells: Why 0.1g Is Enough (No Scalpel) | Stem Cell Therapy Articles | Rakan Clinic Tokyo