Denver (KDVR) – The multiple sclerosis patient who has received stem cell implants in Denver is now in good condition and hopes to spread awareness of the treatment option.
The video and photos Brandi Joe Forenes appear back to her family in Idahu in 2023 after obtaining stem cell transplant at the Colorado Emile Institute in Denver. She was in the hospital for weeks in the hope that the transplant would stop its multiple sclerosis.
“In my case, I have a very aggressive shape,” said Forenes.
Forenes says she was diagnosed 10 years ago, and other treatments have not prevented her symptoms from getting worse.
“I was slowly noticing that my worship was bad,” she said.
That is when I went to CBCI in Denver and discovered that she was a candidate for stem cell transplantation.
“The transplant is a kind of treatment for higher risk, but he has a higher chance and also puts patients in a solid reminder of their disease,” said Dr. Richard Nash, a transplant doctor.
Nash says that she collected and stored her stem cells, gave chemotherapy, then sank her stem cells in the bloodstream to her as they migrated to the bone marrow and repeated them in healthy blood cells.
Nash said: “70 % of patients can enter a solid splendor of up to five years and possibly longer after the transplant,” said Nash.
As for the oven, the transplant stopped the development of its disease, and no longer walks with cane.
She said, “I am now able to run and play with my daughter.”
She has come back to work and now hopes to publish a word about this treatment option for some of the multiple sclerosis patients.
“I have been a nurse for 13 years, but I was very inspired to find out what I can do to make this easier for people and may bring him to my area,” Forenes said.