Immune Cells?
Immune cells play the role of blocking external bacteria or viruses from entering our body.
Immune cells are what allow our body to stay healthy, and if they do not function properly, we will suffer from various diseases, including cancer.
The environment within our body is an immune system that defends and protects the body against antigens such as viruses and bacteria that can invade from the outside. It is divided into innate immunity, which we have from birth, and acquired immunity, which we acquire after birth.
Immune Cells Therapy?
Immune cell therapy involves collecting immune cells directly from the blood, culturing them outside the body to increase the number of immune cells or strengthening their function, and then injecting them back into the body to treat disease.
In other words, treatment is performed by taking immune cells out of the body, further strengthening their function, increasing the number of immune cells hundreds of times, and then returning them to the body.
This immune cell treatment has been found to be significantly effective in chronic fatigue, hyperlipidemia, autoimmune disease, Sjögrin syndrome, and high blood pressure.
In particular, it is widely used in anti-cancer treatment. There are various immune cells in the human body, such as cells that recognize cancer cells, cells that suppress the development of cancer cells, and cells that remove cancer cells that have already occurred. They protect our bodies from cancer. Patients become cancer patients because the function of these immune cells is weakened or their number is too low.
Therefore, immune cell therapy involves growing the patient's immune cells to be strong outside the body so that they can fight cancer and then injecting them back into the patient.
Existing anti-cancer treatments such as radiation therapy and chemotherapy have the problem of killing cancer cells while also killing normal cells. Patients suffer from extreme side effects such as vomiting, diarrhea, hair loss, anemia, infection, and bleeding. Above all, they cause recurrence or metastasis. While the possibility is high, anti-cancer immune cell therapy uses the patient's own immune cells as a treatment agent, causing little pain or side effects, so it is expected to be highly effective in improving the patient's quality of life.