Hormones are the body’s slow signaling network — and one of the first systems to misfire when stress, inflammation, and aging accumulate. Replacement therapy treats the symptoms by topping up what’s missing. Regenerative medicine asks whether the underlying endocrine tissue itself can be supported back toward better function.
By Jed Ryan, Founder and CEO · Reviewed by Adas Darinskas, PhD, Chief Science Officer · Published · Last reviewed
The endocrine system — the network of glands that produce and regulate hormones — runs on feedback loops that depend on healthy tissue at every node. The HPA axis (hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal) governs stress response. The HPG axis (hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal) governs sex hormones. The thyroid governs metabolic rate. When these systems falter, the patient experience is rarely just “low hormone” — it’s fatigue, brain fog, weight gain, mood shifts, sleep disruption, and slowed recovery, all interlinked.
We work with the following in this cluster:
Hormonal conditions look very different on a lab panel, but they share enough underlying biology that the regenerative approach is broadly the same: support the tissue that produces and responds to hormones, restore the signaling that’s broken down, and reduce the inflammation that blunts receptor sensitivity.
Whether the entry point is perimenopause, low testosterone, thyroid dysfunction, or adrenal exhaustion, the same four systems tend to be in trouble underneath the lab numbers.
Bioidentical hormone replacement addresses the first system effectively but does nothing for the underlying tissue health, mitochondrial capacity, or receptor sensitivity. Regenerative protocols target the substrate hormone replacement is layered on top of.
Endocrine tissue is metabolically demanding, vascularly intricate, and slow to repair on its own. Three primary mechanisms do most of the work in regenerative protocols.
The framing is mechanistic: regenerative medicine targets the cellular substrate hormones are produced from and act on. Whether moving those signals improves a specific patient’s symptoms is the clinical question — answered case by case, with full lab follow-up.
Each protocol is designed individually by Dr. Adas Darinskas based on the specific endocrine pattern, lab profile, and treatment history. The four building blocks below are the ones most often deployed for hormonal cases.
An advanced class of mesenchymal stem cells with a stress-enduring property. Delivered systemically by IV, they support endocrine tissue through paracrine signaling and mitochondrial transfer. Particularly relevant in adrenal, thyroid, and gonadal dysfunction where the underlying tissue is depleted rather than absent.
Learn moreA defined stack targeting metabolic dysregulation specifically. Tesofensine and Retatrutide address insulin resistance and weight regulation through receptor pathways. MOTS-c is a mitochondrial-derived peptide that improves insulin sensitivity and metabolic flexibility from the cellular level up. Run as defined-duration cycles.
Learn morePeptides that work upstream of sex hormones — supporting the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal signaling that governs the body’s own production. The goal is restoration of endogenous function rather than long-term replacement. Particularly useful in andropause, perimenopausal transition, and post-cycle support.
Learn moreNAD+ infusions support the mitochondrial cofactor pool that endocrine tissue depends on. Vitamin C, glutathione, and amino-acid IVs support adrenal and thyroid metabolism. Often layered into the days surrounding cellular therapy.
Learn moreFor most hormonal cases the protocol layers these — cellular therapy supporting underlying tissue, metabolic and HPG peptides addressing specific axes, and metabolic IVs underwriting the bioenergetic load. Lab follow-up at defined intervals tracks response.
Strong Craft Regen maintains a continuously updated repository of peer-reviewed research on regenerative medicine — the studies, mechanisms, and ongoing investigations that inform every protocol we coordinate.
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