What Is PRP Therapy and Can It Relieve Chronic Back or Neck Pain?
If you have been dealing with chronic back or neck pain in Montgomery and feel like you have tried everything short of surgery, there is a good chance you have not yet explored one of the most promising developments in non-surgical pain medicine: Platelet-Rich Plasma therapy, more commonly known as PRP.
PRP is not a new concept in medicine, it has been used in orthopedic surgery, wound healing, and sports medicine for decades, but its application as a standalone treatment for chronic spinal and joint pain has expanded significantly as the evidence base has grown and clinical outcomes have continued to impress providers and patients alike.
This article explains what PRP actually is, how it works, what conditions it is best suited for, and what patients at Medical Center Plus in Montgomery and Auburn can expect from this treatment.
PRP biologics are available at Medical Center Plus in Montgomery and Auburn. Call (334) 501-8867 or schedule your consultation today.
What Is Platelet-Rich Plasma?
Your blood is composed of several components: red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets, and plasma. Platelets are the small cell fragments responsible for clotting, but they also carry an extraordinary concentration of growth factors, proteins that play a central role in the body's natural healing and regeneration processes.
Platelet-Rich Plasma is created by drawing a small sample of your own blood and processing it through a centrifuge that separates and concentrates the platelet-rich portion of the plasma. The resulting solution contains a significantly higher concentration of healing growth factors than what naturally circulates in your bloodstream.
When that concentrated PRP is injected into a site of injury, degeneration, or chronic inflammation, it delivers a targeted surge of healing signals directly where they are needed most. The growth factors stimulate cellular repair, promote the regeneration of connective tissue, reduce inflammation, and accelerate the recovery of structures that have a notoriously poor natural blood supply, including spinal discs, tendons, and ligaments.
Because PRP is derived entirely from your own blood, there is no risk of rejection, allergic reaction, or immune response. It is one of the most biologically compatible treatments available in regenerative medicine.
How Is PRP Different from Traditional Pain Injections?
Patients who have received cortisone or steroid injections for back or neck pain are often familiar with the pattern: initial relief that fades after weeks or months, followed by the same pain returning at the same intensity. Steroid injections work by suppressing inflammation, which provides symptom relief but does nothing to address the underlying tissue damage or degeneration causing that inflammation.
PRP works differently. Rather than suppressing your body's response to damage, PRP stimulates your body to repair the damage itself. This is not symptom management, it is an attempt to address the biological source of the problem.
At Medical Center Plus, our biologics program is integrated into a comprehensive, multi-specialty care model. PRP is rarely used in isolation. It is deployed as part of a treatment plan that may also include physical medicine, Electric Cell Signaling Technology, PulseWave therapy, and other modalities working in concert to address your condition from multiple angles.
What Conditions Can PRP Treat?
PRP therapy has the strongest evidence base for pain conditions that involve tissue degeneration, chronic inflammation, or injuries to structures with limited natural healing capacity. At Medical Center Plus, we use PRP biologics for patients in Montgomery and Auburn with the following types of conditions.
Degenerative Disc Disease: When intervertebral discs break down over time, they lose water content, height, and structural integrity. Discs have a very limited blood supply, which is one reason they heal slowly and poorly on their own. PRP injected into or around a degenerated disc can stimulate disc cell activity and reduce the inflammatory cascade that accelerates degeneration. Learn more about our biologics program.
Facet Joint Arthritis: The facet joints at the back of each vertebral level are lined with cartilage that can develop osteoarthritis just like the hip or knee. PRP injected into an arthritic facet joint introduces concentrated growth factors that can reduce inflammation and stimulate cartilage repair, providing more lasting relief than steroid injections alone. Read about conditions we treat.
Chronic Soft Tissue Injuries: Ligament laxity, chronic tendon injuries, and soft tissue damage around the cervical or lumbar spine that has not responded to conventional rehabilitation can be addressed with PRP by stimulating the repair of collagen and connective tissue at the site of injury. Learn about physical medicine and rehabilitation.
Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunction: The SI joints connect the spine to the pelvis and are a frequently missed source of lower back pain. PRP can reduce SI joint inflammation and support stabilization when combined with targeted physical medicine. View all conditions treated at Medical Center Plus.
Nerve Root Irritation: The anti-inflammatory properties of PRP can help reduce inflammation around compressed or irritated nerve roots in the cervical or lumbar spine, complementing Electric Cell Signaling Technology and other nerve-focused therapies.
What Does the Research Say?
The evidence supporting PRP for spinal and musculoskeletal pain has grown substantially over the past decade. Multiple peer-reviewed studies have demonstrated that PRP can reduce pain and improve function in patients with degenerative disc disease, facet joint arthritis, and chronic soft tissue injuries.
It is important to be clear that PRP is not a guaranteed cure, and it is not appropriate for every patient or every condition. Response rates vary depending on the severity of the condition, the patient's overall health, and how PRP is integrated into the broader treatment plan. What the evidence does support is that PRP, used appropriately and as part of a comprehensive care model, is a genuinely regenerative tool with a meaningful clinical role in treating chronic spinal pain.
At Medical Center Plus, we are transparent with every patient about what PRP can and cannot do, what the evidence shows, and how it fits into their overall treatment plan. Read what our patients say about their experience.
What to Expect from PRP Treatment at Medical Center Plus
The PRP process at Medical Center Plus begins with a comprehensive evaluation to determine whether you are an appropriate candidate. Not every patient with back or neck pain is a good fit for PRP, and part of our job is helping you understand whether biologics belong in your treatment plan and what role they would play.
If PRP is recommended, the procedure itself is straightforward. A small blood draw is processed in a centrifuge to concentrate the platelets, then the PRP solution is injected precisely into the target area, whether a disc, facet joint, soft tissue structure, or other site.
Most patients experience minimal discomfort during the procedure. There is typically a period of mild soreness at the injection site in the days following treatment as the healing response gets underway. Improvement is gradual rather than immediate, with most patients beginning to notice meaningful changes over the four to eight weeks following injection.
Explore PRP Biologics in Montgomery and Auburn, AL
Medical Center Plus offers PRP biologics as part of our comprehensive non-surgical pain treatment program at our Montgomery and Auburn clinics. Montgomery: 4209 Carmichael Road. Auburn: 1685 East University Drive, Suite E. If you have been managing chronic back or neck pain and have not explored what regenerative medicine can offer, we would welcome the opportunity to evaluate your case. Call (334) 501-8867 or schedule online.
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📍 4209 Carmichael Rd, Montgomery | 1685 E University Dr, Auburn | (334) 501-8867
Learn more about all of our treatment options: Biologics and PRP | PulseWave Therapy | Electric Cell Signaling Technology | Physical Medicine
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How is PRP different from a cortisone injection?
A: Cortisone injections suppress inflammation temporarily but do nothing to repair the underlying tissue damage causing the pain. PRP therapy uses concentrated healing growth factors from your own blood to actively stimulate tissue repair and regeneration at the source of the problem. It addresses the cause rather than masking the symptom. Learn more about our biologics program.
Q: Is PRP therapy safe?
A: Yes. Because PRP is derived entirely from your own blood, there is no risk of rejection, allergic reaction, or immune response. The procedure carries the same low-level risks as any injection procedure, primarily minor soreness at the injection site. It is one of the most biologically compatible treatments available in pain medicine.
Q: How many PRP sessions will I need?
A: The number of sessions varies depending on your diagnosis, the severity of the condition, and how well your body responds to the initial treatment. Some patients see meaningful improvement after a single injection. Others benefit from a series of treatments as part of a broader care plan. Our clinical team will set clear expectations during your evaluation.
Q: What conditions does PRP treat at Medical Center Plus?
A: PRP biologics at Medical Center Plus are used for degenerative disc disease, facet joint arthritis, chronic soft tissue injuries, sacroiliac joint dysfunction, and nerve root irritation. PRP is integrated with physical medicine, PulseWave therapy, and EST as part of a comprehensive, personalized care plan.
Q: How do I find out if I am a candidate for PRP therapy in Montgomery, AL?
A: The first step is a comprehensive clinical evaluation at Medical Center Plus. Not every patient is an appropriate candidate for PRP, and part of our job is helping you understand whether biologics belong in your treatment plan. Call (334) 501-8867 or schedule your consultation online. We are located at 4209 Carmichael Road, Montgomery, AL 36106.











