Treatment Options

PRP Injections in Sugar Land

PRP flips the usual injection logic: instead of suppressing your biology with steroid, it concentrates it, delivering your own platelets and their healing growth factors directly into tissue that stopped repairing itself.

How it works

Platelets are your blood's first responders, packed with growth factors that recruit repair cells, spark new blood vessel growth, and direct collagen rebuilding. A small blood draw is spun in a centrifuge to concentrate platelets several-fold; that platelet-rich layer is injected precisely into the degenerated tendon or fascia, usually under ultrasound guidance. The concentrated growth-factor payload restarts a repair process that chronic, poorly-vascularized tissue had abandoned, healing rather than hushing.

Who it's for

The profile: months-old tendon or fascia problems that conservative care hasn't beaten, in patients preferring regenerative over suppressive treatment, or where cortisone is unwise (the Achilles, repeat-injection situations). Less suitable with certain blood disorders or anti-inflammatory regimens that blunt platelet function, and we'll ask you to pause NSAIDs around treatment for exactly that reason.

What to Expect

What prp injections looks like at our Sugar Land office

Confirm and map

Ultrasound verifies degenerated tissue and marks the target; PRP works where it's placed, so placement is everything.

Draw, spin, inject

A standard blood draw, 10 to 15 minutes of centrifugation, then ultrasound-guided injection into the lesion under local anesthesia. In and out within an hour.

Protected healing

A short protection period (sometimes a boot for lower-limb tendons), then a progressive loading program; the injection starts the repair, loading tells it which direction to build.

Recovery and results

Expect real soreness for several days to a week; that inflammation is the therapy working, which is also why NSAIDs stay paused. Activity ramps progressively over weeks, and benefits build on tissue-repair time: most studies and our experience put meaningful improvement at 6 to 12 weeks, strengthening for months after. One injection is often sufficient; stubborn cases sometimes warrant a second.

Honest limits and considerations

Safety is a genuine strength: it's your own blood, so allergic and systemic risks are minimal, leaving mainly injection-site soreness and rare infection risk. Honest limits: evidence is good but not uniform across conditions (strongest for plantar fasciitis and some tendinopathies), results take weeks, insurance rarely covers it, and we quote the cash cost before anything. PRP repairs tissue; it doesn't fix the mechanics that wrecked it, so it ships with the correction program.

Common Questions

PRP Injections FAQs

PRP or cortisone: which should I choose?

They answer different questions. Cortisone quiets inflammation quickly but doesn't repair, and can weaken tissue with repetition; PRP is slower, sorer upfront, and aims to actually rebuild degenerated tissue. For chronic tendinosis and recurrent fasciitis, PRP or shockwave usually beats a third round of steroid.

How much does PRP cost and does insurance pay?

Insurance almost never covers PRP, so it's self-pay; the office quotes the exact fee before you decide, with no surprises. When comparing, weigh it against the cost of another year of half-fixes.

Is the evidence for PRP real?

For chronic plantar fasciitis and several tendinopathies, controlled trials show meaningful benefit, often outlasting cortisone at the one-year mark; for other uses evidence is thinner, and we'll tell you which side of that line your condition sits on.

Wondering if prp injections fits your problem?

One exam at our Sugar Land office answers it. Call (281) 494-0572 or book online.