Cyrona Cell Podcast: Stem Cell Therapy in Malaysia
Welcome to the Cyrona Cell Podcast, your trusted source for clear, doctor-led conversations about stem cell therapy and regenerative medicine in Malaysia.
Hosted by the team at Cyrona Cell in Kuala Lumpur, this podcast explores how mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), exosome support, and evidence-informed cell-based care may help patients living with chronic inflammation, immune imbalance, and long-term degenerative conditions.
We discuss:
• How stem cell therapy works in real clinical settings
• What current research supports — and what it does not
• Eligibility and safety screening for treatment
• Conditions such as osteoarthritis, diabetes, neurological disorders, autoimmune diseases, and more
• What international patients can expect when seeking treatment in Malaysia
• Realistic outcomes, risks, and ethical standards in regenerative medicine
At Cyrona Cell, we believe in honest medicine — not hype. Every episode focuses on transparency, medical screening, patient suitability, and integrating cell therapy into a broader treatment plan.
If you are considering stem cell therapy in Kuala Lumpur and want medically grounded information before making a decision, this podcast is designed for you.
New episodes are released regularly.
Cyrona Cell Podcast: Stem Cell Therapy in Malaysia
Stem Cell Therapy for Stroke: Supporting Recovery and Daily Independence
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In this episode, we explore how stem cell therapy for stroke may help support movement, speech, balance, and daily function alongside standard rehabilitation and medical care.
You’ll learn:
- What stem cell therapy for stroke is and how mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) work to support the brain environment
- How MSCs may reduce harmful inflammation, support blood flow, and protect surviving brain cells
- Why this therapy is not a cure and cannot reverse all damage from a stroke
- Who may benefit most, including medically stable patients participating in rehab and therapy
- What to expect during treatment, from evaluation and stem cell preparation to IV administration and follow-up
- Early human studies showing safety and potential improvements in function after ischemic stroke
- How stem cell therapy complements standard rehabilitation, medical care, and daily exercise plans
- The role of exosome therapy as an added support to calm inflammation and guide neural repair
This episode provides a realistic, science-based look at modern cell care for stroke recovery, helping patients and families understand how it may support safer, steady progress in daily life.
Blog Link: Stem Cell Therapy For Stroke
Welcome to the Sirona Cell Podcast.
SPEAKER_01It is so great to be here for this one.
SPEAKER_00And a huge welcome to you, the learner, joining us today for this deep dive into regenerative medicine.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, we've got a really fascinating topic lined up for you today.
SPEAKER_00We really do. So I want you to imagine your brain as this um this bustling, highly electrified city. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01Right, millions of connections just firing constantly.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. But now, imagine a massive earthquake hits that city.
SPEAKER_01A total system shock.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. And you know, the tremors eventually stop, the ground settles, but the devastation is just profound.
SPEAKER_01The infrastructure is totally wrecked.
SPEAKER_00Right. The roads are completely blocked by mountains of rubble, the power lines are severed, and the emergency vehicles just can't get through to the neighborhoods that need them the most.
SPEAKER_01It's a complete disaster zone.
SPEAKER_00It is. And today we aren't talking about how to magically drop new buildings into that disaster zone.
SPEAKER_01No, because that's not how biology works.
SPEAKER_00Right. We are taking a deep dive into how you deploy the ultimate biological cleanup crew to save the city.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell I love that analogy. It fits so well.
SPEAKER_00Okay, let's unpack this. Our mission today is to strip away all that quick fix hype and look at the actual science of cell-based care.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Because there is a lot of hype out there, unfortunately.
SPEAKER_00There totally is. So we are looking specifically at stem cell therapy for stroke recovery through the lens of Sorona cell.
SPEAKER_01Right, which is a doctor-led regenerative medicine center based over in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Yeah. So to really get into this, we have to start at the event itself.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yeah. Because to understand how stem cell therapy is being applied today, we first have to understand the biological landscape of a stroke.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Right, the earthquake.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. Most strokes are ischemic, meaning uh a blood clot blocks the flow of oxygen to a specific part of the brain.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And that creates a massive medical emergency.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell It does. In those first few hours, emergency medicine is entirely focused on breaking that clot and restoring blood flow.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Which is obviously critical to save the patient's life.
SPEAKER_01Absolutely. But what is consistently misunderstood by the general public is what happens after that initial emergency is over.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Yeah, because the common assumption is that once the clot is gone, well the damage is done, right?
SPEAKER_01Right. People think the healing phase just immediately begins.
SPEAKER_00Like you just start your physical therapy and hope for the best.
SPEAKER_01I mean, if only it were that simple. The reality is that the brain's environment post-stroke becomes um actively hostile to its own recovery.
SPEAKER_00Hostile. Like it's fighting itself.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, exactly. When the those initial brain cells, the neurons, are deprived of oxygen, they die.
SPEAKER_00Which is the initial brain damage we think of.
SPEAKER_01Right. But they don't just quietly fade away. They actually rupture and spill their contents everywhere.
SPEAKER_00Oh, wow. So it's not a clean break.
SPEAKER_01Not at all. They spill toxic levels of certain chemicals, like uh glutamate. And this triggers what we call an ischemic cascade.
SPEAKER_00Okay, an ischemic cascade, what does that actually look like in the brain?
SPEAKER_01Basically, the brain's immune cells rush in, creating massive lingering inflammation.
SPEAKER_00Ah, so going back to the city analogy, the earthquake is over, but the rubble is actively catching fire.
SPEAKER_01Yes, the rubble is on fire, and the local environment is essentially toxic.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Which makes traditional rehabilitation incredibly difficult.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, exactly. I mean, if standard rehab, like physical therapy or speech therapy, is the rebuilding effort.
SPEAKER_00You are basically asking the construction workers to rebuild houses while the streets are on fire.
SPEAKER_01And while the supply lines are completely cut, it's a nearly impossible task.
SPEAKER_00Man, that is a bleak picture.
SPEAKER_01It is, which brings us to regenerative medicine and specifically the cells utilized by clinics like Cerona cell.
SPEAKER_00Okay, so how do they actually address this toxic environment?
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Well, what's fascinating here is how human umbilical cord-derived cells, specifically Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cells or WJMSEs, actually function.
SPEAKER_00Wait, I have to stop you there. Because when people hear stem cells, they think of replacement parts.
SPEAKER_01Right. They think we are injecting new brain cells that will just wire themselves into the gaps.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. Like delivering new bricks to rebuild the fallen buildings, you're saying they don't do that.
SPEAKER_01They do not. I mean, we really need to shatter that misconception.
SPEAKER_00So they don't just replace the dead neurons one for one.
SPEAKER_01No. While mesenchymal stem cells do have the ability to differentiate, when we put them into a post-stroke environment, that isn't their primary job at all.
SPEAKER_00Okay, so if they aren't the new buildings, what are they?
SPEAKER_01Think of them as specialized foremin deployed into the disaster zone to direct the cleanup.
SPEAKER_00Oh, that makes so much more sense.
SPEAKER_01Right. Once they are introduced, they utilize something called peracrine signaling. Exactly. They release a highly specific cocktail of cell-derived signals into the surrounding tissue.
SPEAKER_00So they are basically communicating with the brain's existing landscape. What are they actually saying?
SPEAKER_01They are sending very specific biochemical instructions to change that hostile environment we talked about.
SPEAKER_00Like telling the fires to go out.
SPEAKER_01Literally, yes. First, they secrete anti-inflammatory cytokines.
SPEAKER_00Okay, cytokines.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. These are proteins that tell the brain's hyperactive immune system to just stand down. It effectively clears that inflammatory rubble.
SPEAKER_00Wow. And what about the cut supply lines?
SPEAKER_01That's the second part. They release growth factors like vascular endothelial growth factor or VEGF.
SPEAKER_00And VEGF does what exactly?
SPEAKER_01It stimulates angiogenesis, which is the creation of new blood vessels.
SPEAKER_00So they literally get the supply lines running again. That is incredible.
SPEAKER_01It is. They encourage better circulation so that oxygen and vital nutrients can actually reach the cells that survived.
SPEAKER_00The ones that survived the earthquake but are currently starving and stressed out.
SPEAKER_01Precisely. By doing this, they protect those surviving networks from secondary damage.
SPEAKER_00And I imagine that sets the stage for the brain to actually heal itself.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. It creates an environment where neuroplasticity, which is the brain's natural ability to form new connections, can actually occur.
SPEAKER_00That completely flips the script on how we view this therapy. I mean, it's environmental engineering, not a parts replacement.
SPEAKER_01That is the perfect way to phrase it.
SPEAKER_00But wait, if these specialized support units are the key to changing the brain's environment, where exactly do they come from?
SPEAKER_01That is the crucial question, especially when you are navigating this field.
SPEAKER_00Right. Because when people hear stem cells, they sometimes think of controversy or, you know, wild experimental science.
SPEAKER_01And honestly, they have a right to be cautious. The source and the preparation of these cells dictate absolutely everything.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell So how does a clinic like Saronacell navigate that? How do we know it's safe?
SPEAKER_01Well, they navigate it by drawing very strict scientific and ethical boundaries.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Like what? What do they explicitly avoid?
SPEAKER_01For starters, they explicitly do not use embryonic stem cells.
SPEAKER_00Okay, so none of the controversial embryonic sources?
SPEAKER_01None. And they also do not use experimental pluripotent stem cells, which are adult cells engineered in a lab.
SPEAKER_00Why not use those engineered ones?
SPEAKER_01Because while they are great for lab research, they carry higher risks of uncontrolled growth or even tumor formation when used clinically.
SPEAKER_00Oh wow. Yeah, you definitely don't want that in your brain.
SPEAKER_01Definitely not. So Ciranacell strictly uses Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cells.
SPEAKER_00And these are ethically sourced, right?
SPEAKER_01Yes. From healthy term deliveries with strict donor consent.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Okay, let's break that down for the learner. What makes this Wharton's jelly so special?
SPEAKER_01So Wharton's jelly is the gelatinous substance inside the umbilical cord that protects the blood vessels.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And the cells inside that jelly are different from, say, stem cells in my bone marrow.
SPEAKER_01Incredibly different. Because they are essentially day zero cells.
SPEAKER_00Meaning they are brand new.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. They haven't been exposed to decades of environmental toxins or aging or disease like your own bone marrow cells have.
SPEAKER_00That makes total sense. They are fresh and robust.
SPEAKER_01Very robust. They are highly proliferative and they have profound immunomodulatory properties.
SPEAKER_00Immunomodulatory meaning they calm the immune system down.
SPEAKER_01Oh right. They regulate it without triggering a rejection response from the patient's body.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell, which explains why you don't need complex tissue matching like you would for an organ transplant.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. But just having good source material isn't enough.
SPEAKER_00Right. Because in our research, I noticed an absolute alphabet soup of certifications attached to their labs.
SPEAKER_01It's intense. It requires pharmaceutical grade quality control.
SPEAKER_00Like the CGMP certification.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Current good manufacturing practice. They use early passage cells prepared under CGMP standards.
SPEAKER_00Early passage meaning they haven't been copied a million times in a petri dish.
SPEAKER_01Right. So they don't lose their potency. And they also operate under ISO 9001 certified systems.
SPEAKER_00And BSL2 laboratory standards, right?
SPEAKER_01Yes. Biosafety level 2.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Translating that from LabSpeak, that basically means the environment is hyper-sterile and tightly controlled.
SPEAKER_01It means there are rigorous, non-negotiable checks on every single batch. They check for identity, sterility, and viability.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell To make sure they are the right cells, there's no bacteria, and the cells are actually alive.
SPEAKER_01Precisely. And that level of strictness is exactly why they attract a global patient base.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, their location in Cyber Gias, Langor, Malaysia, they coordinate travel and care for people flying in from all over, like Australia and the Middle East.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Because patients are actively seeking out this safe, science-led care over exaggerated claims. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00Cyrona cell is actually named after a Celtic goddess of health and protection. That really reflects their whole philosophy.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell It does. They prioritize safe, structured protocols above all else.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Okay, so now that we know the cells are ethically sourced and rigorously tested, what does this all actually mean for the patient?
SPEAKER_01That's the reality check we need to have.
SPEAKER_00Because I mean, is this a magic pill? To me, it sounds like pouring premium fuel into a car. It's highly beneficial, but the engine still has to be running.
SPEAKER_01That is a brilliant analogy. And the doctors at Cyrena Cell are very transparent about this.
SPEAKER_00They don't promise a hundred percent cure.
SPEAKER_01No therapy can guarantee a complete reversal of a stroke. They will flat out to a patient if they are not a good fit.
SPEAKER_00Wow. So they actually turn people away?
SPEAKER_01Yes, because it is an adjunct to standard care, not a replacement.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell So what does the actual patient pathway look like?
SPEAKER_01It starts with a deep medical evaluation, reviewing MRI scans, medications, time since the event.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And agreeing on realistic aims, I assume.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Exactly. We are talking about functional improvements, improving movement, speech, balance, just daily independence.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Just getting those micro victories that completely change a life.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Right. And then the administration itself is minimally invasive.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell No open surgery or anything crazy.
SPEAKER_01No, it is usually just a slow IV drip while the patient is relaxing in a chair.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And then they track those functional changes over the long term during the physical rehab.
SPEAKER_01Yes. The therapy works alongside the rehab.
SPEAKER_00Now speaking of the therapy, there's an added value service they provide called exosomes. I really want to talk about this. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_01Exosomes are incredible. They're a huge part of this regenerative puzzle.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Ross Powell So if the stem cell is the repair worker, the formum we talked about, is the exosome basically like a text message sent by the worker to the brain's native cells?
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yes. Your text message analogy is remarkably accurate.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Delivering the exact biochemical instructions needed to calm the inflammation.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. Exosomes are these tiny messenger packets secreted by the stem cells.
SPEAKER_00And they just float over to the damaged areas.
SPEAKER_01They do. And they deliver things like microRNAs that literally instruct the hyperactive immune cells to switch from destroying tissue to repairing it.
SPEAKER_00That is wild. It strengthens the overall support of plants so much.
SPEAKER_01It really does. It amplifies that pericarin signaling we discussed earlier.
SPEAKER_00Okay, so we have the theory, we have the clinical pathway.
SPEAKER_01Right.
SPEAKER_00But to truly trust this process, we need to look at the real-world human data.
SPEAKER_01We do. We have to look at what happens when researchers actually track this.
SPEAKER_00Here's where it gets really interesting. Because looking at the medical studies from our sources, I am so eager to see how this support unit theory holds up in humans.
SPEAKER_01Well, let's break down the two key studies. First, there's a 2023 study from Jagilonian University Medical College in Poland.
SPEAKER_00Okay, the Polish study. Who are the patients?
SPEAKER_01It was a case series on chronic stroke patients.
SPEAKER_00Chronic meaning they were months or even years past the initial earthquake event, right?
SPEAKER_01Exactly. When standard medicine says recovery has basically plateaued.
SPEAKER_00So what do they do?
SPEAKER_01They administered multiple doses of Wharton's jelly MSCs and compared them to standard care.
SPEAKER_00And the results?
SPEAKER_01The treatment was tolerated without any serious adverse events. It was safe.
SPEAKER_00Which is always step one. But did it actually work?
SPEAKER_01It did. Some patients showed actual improved functional measures compared to the control group.
SPEAKER_00So they basically reopened a window of healing that everyone thought was nailed shut.
SPEAKER_01By changing the brain's environment, yes. They allowed that neuroplasticity to kick back in.
SPEAKER_00That is just amazing. And then there's an older study from 2013, right? Out of Nanjing Medical University in China.
SPEAKER_01Yes. This was a feasibility study for ischemic stroke.
SPEAKER_00But they used a different delivery method, didn't they?
SPEAKER_01They did. Instead of a standard FIA, they used catheter delivery of umbilical cord MSCs directly to the blocked artery.
SPEAKER_00So driving the cleanup crew right up to the edge of the disaster zone.
SPEAKER_01Precisely. And they found that delivery was totally feasible. And again, some patients showed neurological improvement.
SPEAKER_00So whether it's an IV or a catheter, the principle holds up.
SPEAKER_01It does. Now, if we connect this to the bigger picture, while results will always vary by dose and the patient's individual health, these human signals of safety and feasibility are absolutely crucial. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00They are the stepping stones.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. They are the stepping stones for the entire field of regenerative medicine.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell This has just completely shifted my perspective.
SPEAKER_01It's a lot to take in, but it's so important.
SPEAKER_00It really is. I mean, to summarize this for you, the learner, stem cell therapy for stroke, just isn't about magical replacement parts.
SPEAKER_01It's not at all.
SPEAKER_00It's entirely about changing the brain's environment.
SPEAKER_01Right.
SPEAKER_00Guided by strict safety standards, honest medical screening, and an integrated rehab approach like they do at Cirona Cell.
SPEAKER_01That is the perfect summary. And, you know, it leaves us with something much deeper to consider.
SPEAKER_00Oh, I love a good final thought. Lay it on me.
SPEAKER_01Well, if our bodies can be coaxed into healing themselves through the targeted delivery of cellular messenger packets like exosomes, how might this change our entire definition of a medicine in the next decade? Wow. I mean, could the future of healing be less about synthetic chemicals and more about speaking the body's own biological programming language?
SPEAKER_00Speaking the body's own biological programming language, that is just that is a massive paradigm shift to mull over.
SPEAKER_01It really makes you look at healing in a totally new way.
SPEAKER_00It absolutely does. Well, thank you so much to you, the learner, for joining us on this deep dive.
SPEAKER_01Yes. Thank you for tuning in.
SPEAKER_00Keep questioning, keep exploring the science, and we will catch you on the next one.