Celva Bio/ IV longevity/ How long results last
§ 001 · Durability

Durability,
and the decay curve.

How long the effect of IV MSC therapy actually lasts, when it starts to fade, and how to read whether a maintenance infusion makes sense, or doesn't yet.

Peak
Mo 3–6

Where most patients report best-achieved response after a loading infusion.

Plateau
Mo 6–12

Response holds. This is the window where maintenance decisions are made.

Decay
Mo 12–18

Gradual return toward baseline for many. Individual curves vary.

§ 002 · The curve

What the response
curve looks like.

A loading infusion doesn't "last forever", and it doesn't fade in a month. Between months three and twelve most patients sit on a plateau. After twelve months, the curve begins trending back toward baseline. The rate of decay varies by person.

Patients with higher baseline inflammatory burden often experience a steeper initial response and a shorter plateau. Patients with lower baseline tend toward a flatter, longer durability curve.

This is why maintenance is reviewed at twelve months rather than scheduled reflexively at six. The response tells us when to intervene again.

Week 0
Infusion

Baseline. Biodistribution begins.

Weeks 2–8
Rising phase

Early signals emerge, sleep, recovery, inflammation markers.

Months 3–6
Peak window

Best-achieved response for most patients.

Months 6–12
Plateau

Response holds. Stability is the signal.

Months 12–18
Decay

Gradual return toward baseline begins for many. Maintenance considered.

§ 003 · What affects durability

Why some
hold longer.

Factor 01

Baseline inflammation

Higher baseline often means steeper initial response, shorter plateau. Lower baseline tends toward longer durability.

  • CRP / ESR trends
  • Chronic inflammatory load
  • Autoimmune-adjacent profile
Factor 02

Lifestyle load

Sleep, training, nutrition, and stress compound. The better the foundation, the longer the response holds.

  • Sleep duration / quality
  • Training volume & load
  • Metabolic health
Factor 03

Age & recovery capacity

Younger patients with intact recovery biology often see longer plateaus. The decay curve steepens with age.

  • Age decile
  • Hormonal status
  • Resident tissue biology
§ 004 · Maintenance decision

When a repeat
makes sense.

Maintenance is a decision made at the twelve-month review, not a standing subscription. The signal is the response curve, not the calendar.

When the response is clearly fading, a maintenance infusion is appropriate. When the response is holding, we defer. We'll tell you either way.

Signal 01

Clear decay markers

Symptoms returning. Biomarkers trending back toward pre-infusion values. Maintenance reasonable.

Signal 02

Still on plateau

Response holding. No clear decay. Defer and reassess in six months.

Signal 03

Life event or major load

Surgery, prolonged illness, major training block. Pre-emptive maintenance may make sense, by indication.

§ 005 · Questions

Durability
questions.

Q.01What's the longest anyone has held a response?
Individual cases with two to three year plateaus from a single dose exist. They are not the median. Most patients maintain with two to four infusions per year, redosing as the response signal starts to fade.
Q.02Can I measure durability objectively?
Partially. Inflammation markers, sleep quality, training-recovery metrics, and symptom-specific tracking give quantitative signals. We re-check baseline labs at six and twelve months.
Q.03What if I'm not feeling anything fade yet at my next review?
Then we defer maintenance. We don't infuse on a calendar, we infuse on a response signal. Save the investment until it's earned.
§ 007 · Start here

Maintenance,
by indication.

We structure follow-up around your actual response. No monthly subscriptions. No pre-scheduled infusions without a clinical reason.

Book a consult →
Not medical advice. Individual results vary.