Novel Blood Treatment Lures Athletes in Pain to Germany (original) (raw)
Sports|Novel Blood Treatment Lures Athletes to Germany
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Dr. Peter Wehling treated the professional golfer Wes Short Jr. in Düsseldorf, Germany. So much blood was drawn, Short said, that “I didn’t think I’d have any left.”Credit...Gordon Welters for The New York Times
- July 10, 2012
DÜSSELDORF, Germany — The medical treatment for Lindsey Berg’s arthritic left knee has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, and neither her professional volleyball team in Italy nor the United States Olympic team would help with the cost. But for Berg, a gold medal hopeful, the chance to dull the chronic pain was worth the money, and the risk.
So between the end of her professional season and the start of Olympic practices in California, Berg stopped at the office of Dr. Peter Wehling on the bank of the Rhine River. “I’ve been struggling with knee pain for the last four years and just continuing to play on it,” said Berg, 31, who had tried surgery and cortisone injections to little avail.
After examining her, Wehling and his team drew syringes of her blood. First they incubated it. Then they spun it in a centrifuge. The blood cells produce proteins that reduce inflammation and stimulate cellular growth; sometimes additional anti-inflammatory proteins are added to the solution. Finally, Wehling injected the orange serum into Berg’s knee.
The price came to 6,000 euros, or about $7,400, out of her own pocket, but with the Olympics in London coming up, any treatment that might make her knee better was worth it. “It’s your body and your money because they’re not paying for it,” she said with cheerful resignation, on the fourth day of her treatment.
Wehling’s practice has become almost a pilgrimage site for athletes trying to prolong careers that have tested the limits of their bodies. It has also been the subject of no small amount of speculation after word leaked last year that the Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant had flown to Düsseldorf for the treatments. Alex Rodriguez of the Yankees traveled there as well. After the N.B.A. season ended, Lakers center Andrew Bynum, Bryant’s teammate, said he, too, would try it.
Commentators wanted to know if there was something fishy that required Bryant to go abroad for medical treatment. As his scoring average increased and the aging star seemed rejuvenated, the interest in the trips to Germany and the unusual treatment grew.
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