If you’ve been living with chronic joint pain, a torn ligament, or an injury that won’t heal — and you’re not ready to accept surgery as your only option — you’ve probably come across the terms Prolotherapy, PRP, and Prolozone.
They all fall under the umbrella of regenerative injection therapy. They all aim to do the same thing: trigger your body’s natural healing process so damaged tissue repairs itself. But they work in meaningfully different ways, and the best choice depends on your specific condition, history, and goals.
At Integral Medicine in Sarasota, Dr. Alexander Smithers M.D., A.P. has been using all three approaches — often in combination — to help patients avoid surgery and recover lasting function. In this post, he breaks down each therapy so you can come to your consultation informed and ready.
Ready to find out which option suits your situation? Schedule a consultation or call us at 941-444-6336.
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What Is Prolotherapy?
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Prolotherapy — short for proliferative therapy — is one of the oldest regenerative injection techniques in modern medicine, with roots going back over 70 years.
How It Works
A solution of dextrose (a natural sugar) combined with a local anesthetic is injected directly into the site of a damaged or weakened ligament, tendon, or joint. This creates a mild, controlled inflammatory response. That response signals your body to send in the repair crew: growth factors, collagen-producing cells, and fresh connective tissue.
Over a series of treatments, this process rebuilds and strengthens the damaged structure — not by masking the pain, but by addressing the underlying instability that causes it.
What Conditions Respond Well to Prolotherapy?
• Chronic low back pain
• Knee instability and osteoarthritis
• Shoulder joint laxity
• Herniated or bulging discs
• Hip, ankle, and foot pain
• Varicose and spider veins
• Tendon and ligament injuries that haven’t healed on their own
Prolotherapy is particularly well-suited to chronic conditions where the tissue has had time to become lax, weakened, or degenerated.
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What Is Prolozone Therapy
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Prolozone is a variation of prolotherapy developed by Dr. Frank Shallenberger, M.D. It combines the proliferative injection approach with ozone gas — and it’s where Integral Medicine stands apart from most clinics in Florida.
How It Works
Instead of dextrose alone, the injection solution includes ozone (O₃) mixed with vitamins and homeopathic compounds. Ozone is a highly reactive form of oxygen with documented anti-inflammatory and tissue-regenerating properties.
Where standard prolotherapy stimulates healing by triggering controlled inflammation, Prolozone works partly by reducing inflammation while simultaneously flooding the injured tissue with oxygen — improving cellular energy production (ATP) and accelerating tissue repair.
What Makes Prolozone Different?
• Fewer injections per session than traditional prolotherapy
• May work more quickly for some patients
• Especially effective for inflammatory conditions, fibromyalgia, and cases where inflammation is the dominant problem
• Can be appropriate for patients who haven’t responded fully to standard prolotherapy
Dr. Smithers is one of only a small number of physicians in Florida offering Prolozone therapy, with extensive training through the American Association of Orthopaedic Medicine (AAOM).
Conditions That Often Respond to Prolozone
• Rotator cuff injuries
• Sciatica and lumbar spine pain
• Knee pain and osteoarthritis
• Fibromyalgia
• Sports injuries
• Chronic back pain
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What Is PRP (Platelet-Rich Plasma) Therapy?
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PRP therapy takes regenerative medicine one step further by using your own blood as the healing agent.
How It Works
A small sample of your blood is drawn and placed in a centrifuge. This separates the components and concentrates the platelets — the cells responsible for clotting and tissue repair. This concentrated platelet-rich plasma, which contains 5–10 times the normal platelet concentration, is then injected into the damaged area.
Platelets release growth factors that directly stimulate the repair of tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and other connective tissues. Because the solution is derived from your own body, there is no risk of allergic reaction.
When Is PRP the Right Choice?
PRP tends to shine in cases involving:
• Acute or sub-acute soft tissue injuries (tendons, muscles)
• Rotator cuff tears
• Knee osteoarthritis
• Tennis elbow and plantar fasciitis
• Conditions where a stronger regenerative signal is needed than dextrose alone can provide
• Patients who are good candidates for a more targeted, single-treatment approach
PLATELET RICH PLASMA (PRP)
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Can These Treatments Be Combined?
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Yes — and often they are. Dr. Smithers evaluates each patient individually and may recommend a staged or combined protocol depending on the severity, location, and nature of the injury.
For example, a patient with both chronic ligament laxity and active inflammation in a joint may benefit from a Prolozone protocol early on to reduce inflammation, followed by Prolotherapy to rebuild structural strength.
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What Patients at Integral Medicine Have Experienced
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“My shoulder has been in pain for months and after finding out I have some rotator cuff tears, I decided to pursue Prolotherapy with Dr. Smithers. The result so far has been outstanding! The first night after the shots was still painful, but woke up the next morning and pain was almost completely gone.” — Patient review
“I had been treated by Dr. Smithers for over eight years to manage/reduce/in some areas eliminate immense pain in multiple joints from a combination of sports wear-tear, osteoarthritis, and sickle cell trait issues.” — Patient review
“Dr. Alex Smithers is outstanding — a talented doctor who is extremely passionate about healing as well as the skills involved in rejuvenative therapies. I go to him for ozone (Prolozone) and dextrose (Prolotherapy) injections.” — Patient review
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Frequently Asked Questions
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Q: Are these treatments covered by insurance?
A: Coverage varies by plan and service. Contact our clinic and we can provide standard visit codes to help you verify benefits with your insurer.
Q: How many sessions will I need?
A: This depends on the treatment type, the condition being treated, and your body’s response. Dr. Smithers will give you a realistic treatment plan at your initial consultation.
Q: Are these treatments painful?
A: Most patients experience mild discomfort during the injection and sometimes temporary soreness in the 24–48 hours after treatment, as part of the healing response. Dr. Smithers uses anesthetic in most injection protocols to minimize discomfort.
Q: How long before I see results?
A: Some patients notice improvements within days of their first treatment. For structural issues requiring tissue rebuilding (like ligament laxity), meaningful improvement typically accumulates over a series of sessions.
Q: Do I need imaging before treatment?
A: Dr. Smithers uses High Definition Ultrasound in his practice, which supports precise evaluation and injection accuracy. Prior imaging records are reviewed at your intake appointment.
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Which Treatment Is Right for You?
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There’s no universal answer — which is exactly why a thorough intake consultation matters. Dr. Smithers’ approach begins with a detailed history, physical examination, and review of prior records before any treatment is recommended.
If you’re in the Sarasota or Bradenton area and you’re ready to explore whether Prolotherapy, Prolozone, or PRP is the right next step for your pain, we’d love to talk.
📍 2805 Fruitville Rd., Suite 250, Sarasota, FL 34237
📞 941-444-6336