Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Blumah.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Yes, the East Boston as they can make it plain
Asta Roxbury, questosk Boston, Luck.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Buenos Dias, Boston. Good morning everybody.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
We are so thrilled and excited to have our guests today.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
This is a special Sunday because not every day I get.
Speaker 4 (00:26):
To talk to one of my best friends and also
the people that are in charge of my beauty.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
We have two special guests today.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
They are very well known in the medical aesthetics, but
also with all the innovation and some of the natural
resources that they have in order to heal.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
Bodies minds, uh, to make you feel better if you
have efficiencies.
Speaker 4 (00:55):
I mean I can sit here for two hours and
tell you everything that they do, but whom better than
themselves to share what Dynamic Evolution is. So welcome please
doctor Edgar Ballenas and Christina Knight, who owns Dynamic Evolutions,
Bian Benidos, Yes.
Speaker 5 (01:15):
Thank you for having us and Benitos as well, and
pleasure absolutely And to say that beauty You've always had beauty.
We're just trying to keep it going longevity and that's
the key aspect.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
It look better right.
Speaker 5 (01:29):
Well, like I said, I think you've got the foundation
it's just the longevity of it. People want to continue
to have that beauty, right, So Edgar see.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
I would love to learn a lot about dynamic evolutions.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
But my interest and I think that people are going
to be also more.
Speaker 4 (01:47):
Interested in who is Christina Knight and who is Edgar.
So if I tell my friends, like Christina is from
Greece and what's what what's Christina all about?
Speaker 6 (02:02):
Well, hi, everybody, Well, Christina is all about just making
people feel well from the inside out. So coming to
this country from Greece, I grew up the Mediterranean way,
so everything was natural. We didn't look at medications, never
took one, didn't do vaccines, things.
Speaker 7 (02:23):
Like that along the way.
Speaker 6 (02:25):
And my goal was to teach people how to eat right,
exercise and feel good about themselves. So my career has
been for about thirty years in integrative medicine.
Speaker 7 (02:39):
So I was blessed.
Speaker 6 (02:41):
So integrative medicine is Eastern and Western medicine coming together.
Speaker 7 (02:46):
So the way I.
Speaker 6 (02:50):
Learned traditional medicine, I went to nursing school and then
I went for my masters to become a nurse practitioner.
And I was a family trained to still am a
nurse spectitioners so I see the whole spectrum from you know,
we say from womb to tomb is the saying.
Speaker 7 (03:07):
But integrative medicine takes.
Speaker 6 (03:10):
Both what is going on everywhere outside the US and
what's going on here in the US. So instead of
taking a medication for a certain symptom, I look for
the cause of the symptom.
Speaker 7 (03:25):
So whether I do blood work, or whether I do.
Speaker 6 (03:28):
Certain specialized testing through specialty labs, or right now we
have this device called the Thoroughwellness that will identify imbalances
in your body and disease cells. I would rather not
draw a lout on somebody, especially if they don't like needles,
and have people spend all this money on testing because
(03:51):
it's very expensive to these labs, when I can just.
Speaker 7 (03:54):
You test you through kinesiology.
Speaker 8 (03:56):
That love for medicine, where did it start? Like did
you see a show, did you see you know a
parent or somebody around you?
Speaker 3 (04:07):
How did you decide, Okay, I'm going to become a
nurse now.
Speaker 6 (04:10):
Oh, I was always fascinated as a little child, grew
up in the food business what Greek doesn't and what
Italian doesn't, right, And so I've always had that say,
the communication which just just that relationship with customers.
Speaker 7 (04:28):
So it doesn't matter.
Speaker 6 (04:30):
In food business, you know, to deal with the customer
and to deal with the patient. It's you know, it's
really not a difference, you know, it's it's it's you,
your personality taking care of people, whether you're taking care
of them, you know, in a restaurant or actually even
in you know, a retail place, you're you're talking to people.
(04:51):
So I loved people. I always liked being around people,
like talking to people. And then I just just the
way I was brought up, it didn't seem right me.
Speaker 7 (05:00):
It's like, why are you taking this medication when you
can do this?
Speaker 6 (05:03):
So now I was always fascinated curiosity, and I always
wanted to like I was the first person, like if
somebody got hurt of something, I wanted to see what
it was, you know, to me, it was fascinating, and
I just found the body fascinating. So from a young age,
I always wanted to go into the field of medicine.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
And Edgar, for you, was it the same or did.
Speaker 4 (05:27):
You also have that interest of like I see blood,
I want to find out what happened. Because you go
from emergency room to now aesthetics and surgeries and whatnot.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
So how did it start?
Speaker 5 (05:38):
Well, just like Christida mentioned a kind of having a
classic blood in her European Greek, I mean home or
classic can.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
You have I too? To certain degrade.
Speaker 5 (05:50):
Both my parents from South America and in Peru in fact,
and my brother found that we had inkle blood. So
that's uh, that's an interesting, uh characteristic And both my
parents were actually in the medical field and uh, and
they came to America to establish their family and and
(06:12):
knowing and having that, I guess in my blood, not
just the Inker heritage, but two parents who are in
the medical field sort of set things up, I guess
for me in the future. And it's funny people always
ask me medicine medical school must have been your biggest challenge,
And although it is, and it was, you know, I
would tell them I said, no, No, it wasn't my
(06:34):
biggest challenge. And then they would be like, oh, I
guess college was, and I'd say, no, college wasn't the
biggest challenge, although again it was.
Speaker 1 (06:41):
To me.
Speaker 5 (06:42):
It was getting out of high school and from Brooklyn
Bedford sty proud of it, and uh, the upbringing, even
though I had excellent parents, outstanding parents, it was, it
was it was around the challenging city type upbringing.
Speaker 3 (06:58):
And how does the connection here happen?
Speaker 4 (07:02):
Because you go from being an expectitioner taking care of women.
Also because I know that you have a lot of
experience with hormones and menopause and like all the transition
that a woman goes through and then Edgar, you go
from the er to now doing liposuctions and rejuvenation techniques
(07:23):
and protocols, and at the same time you're treating professional
athletes and injectingtemselves, which is so fascinating to me.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Where does the connection between you two happen?
Speaker 6 (07:36):
Well, I've been doing everything I'm doing now in integrative medicine.
Like I said, I was in a private practice and
I had a large following treating mostly women with biodentical
hormones and doing the functional medicine component as well as
doing traditional medicine, doing physicals, everything for transitioning and men too,
(08:01):
So that isn't anything new to me. I just wanted
my own practice. I didn't want to deal with the
insurances anymore. I didn't want to deal with doing prior offs.
And even though you do a prior authorization for something
a patient needs, they still get charged a whole amount
of money.
Speaker 7 (08:20):
So we make.
Speaker 6 (08:21):
It cost effective where we are because when you come
see us, you're gonna feel better. Yes, we're gonna take
you off those medications that you don't need.
Speaker 7 (08:30):
We're gonna decrease your anxiety. We're gonna educate you. And
this is we did this. I was blessed.
Speaker 6 (08:37):
Like again, I have to say it was I'm saying
blessed because I was where I worked, I had that time. Okay,
we were in a setting where we had more time
with patients, took a little less pay than the average person,
but we actually saw the person. But then when insurance
got involved and things started to change, that was all
taken away without the increase in pay. So I'm like,
(08:58):
wait a minute, So you're working harder and you're not
given the people.
Speaker 9 (09:02):
And I think a lot of the medical feel feels
that way, right. Yeah, It's like it's the way that
probably us as patients feel like we come in and
out and then there's like, okay.
Speaker 4 (09:14):
You're here ten minutes, they check you your blood pressure,
and then all of a sudden, like everybody's coming in
and out of the you know, consultation section.
Speaker 3 (09:22):
And then you're like, oh, what do I have?
Speaker 4 (09:25):
Yah?
Speaker 3 (09:25):
How can you feel everybody?
Speaker 6 (09:27):
Everybody's referred out? When I did primary care, everything was
down there. I started you on medication and send you
out to a psychology and you know, little things that
you can't do anymore because everything's referred out because you're
limited with time, so you don't get that whole. The
patient doesn't feel like they get what they needed. They're
(09:47):
like fragmented. So it's almost like a surgeon and you
know the gobblader, you know, the gallblader on the room
for sea instead of the person's name.
Speaker 7 (09:56):
So it's it's very rewarding to us when people come in.
They get our time, you know, they get our time when.
Speaker 4 (10:05):
We had plan to have a plan right, And that's
what I really appreciate. And Edgar, when you join Christina
and I've seen you guys work together, and we haven't
even talked about Marianne, but we'll get to that point.
Speaker 3 (10:20):
I believe that.
Speaker 4 (10:22):
The combination of your expertises and what you provide individually
and as a team is top notch. I mean like
it's very difficult to find a group of medics that
offer all of that.
Speaker 3 (10:38):
So Edgar, for you, how.
Speaker 4 (10:40):
Is it to join Christina and be able to develop
these new techniques or protocols you know in the medical field.
Speaker 5 (10:52):
Yeah, No, I think it's to have a degree as
a physician and to want to explore things that are new,
at least in this country. A lot of things that
we currently practice actually has been existence at a country
for years, and to sort of want to get involved
(11:13):
with the other ways of treatment is just exciting. And
you take it also kind of like on a personal level,
what can be done to help me continue to be
healthy and so forth, And so that was kind of
like the gateway. Christina was involved in that sort of
practice and she had that mindset. I mean, emergency medicine
(11:35):
was very exciting. I loved it, and I did it
for a good number of years. And we would see
obviously patients or individuals who didn't have a healthy lifestyle
and then they would be inflicted with bad things, you know.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
Like struggle.
Speaker 5 (11:49):
So fine healthy lifestyle, well, it starts with knowing that
you have to first of all, eat healthy. I mean,
unfortunately this country has a huge problem with obesity, right,
I think as high as sixty seventy percent of the population,
and so it could be because of some genetic problems,
(12:11):
but more often than not, it's a bad type of
lifestyle and it's the fast paced, fast food type.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
Of thing, and so often nowadays and people try to
not follow.
Speaker 5 (12:25):
Right with that, And then the trend of medicine is
to all right, well, you're obese, and so you got
the diabetes and hypertension. Well, here's medications that will control
the diabetes and hypertension. And that may be all well
and good, but once we get to the source of
why you have hypertension and diabetes, and it typically is
because a person is overweight, and what can we do
(12:48):
about it? And so that's one of the things we
specialize in as well. I mean the advent of the
medications that people are well aware of. It's become part
of social media, like the ozembic.
Speaker 4 (13:00):
Right, you're attacking my favorite topic here, because there are
a lot of people that do not want to discuss however,
they're either doing it or they're looking into it, but
there are still a lot of taboos and a lot
of shame if you want to call it. Somehow, because
people are expected to in a very vigorous tiet or
exercise like twenty four hours a day and whatnot. But
(13:23):
things have changed, right, and you can have these medications.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
That are like supporting you.
Speaker 5 (13:30):
Yeah, no, it starts even before that. I mean hormone therapy,
vitamin therapy, things that.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Most individuals don't get from their own doctors at times.
Speaker 5 (13:44):
And I'm not blaming the doctors with regards to not
doing that. It's just that their schedule is such that
number one, it's usually a fifteen to twenty minute visit,
like you said earlier. Number two, it's a prescription. This
will take care of what's going on. And then number three,
it's like being able to try and get back and
discuss more things with your doctor you know isn't available
(14:06):
and you realize Christina says, a lot of what we do.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Is personalized medicine. So what does that mean.
Speaker 5 (14:13):
Well, that means we take care of the problem, not
just during that office visit, but afterwards all the follow.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
Up visits that we do with clients.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
So I have to share a little bit of my experience, yes,
because I believe that people sometimes do not know what
to expect when you're.
Speaker 3 (14:30):
Visiting a medical aesthetic practice. So in my case, I've
been to several.
Speaker 4 (14:36):
Spas, the lovely massages and they take care of your
skin when you decide to step it up and now
go to a medical aesthetic practice. Now you're talking about
the bhotox of the world and feelers and whatnot.
Speaker 5 (14:51):
Right, Yeah, that's all important, but a lot of times
some of these skin issues can be due to again
going back to bad habits, which diet.
Speaker 3 (15:00):
Which that brings me to the next point. When I
found you guys, and I saw.
Speaker 4 (15:05):
The amazing dynamic, like literally the dynamic, you know.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
Our energy that you have as a team, because.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
That's what called my attention. That's a differentiator that I
see with you guys. Maybe i'm you know, because this
is my area.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
I just know you guys.
Speaker 4 (15:22):
But if I don't think there's a lot of what
you offer out there, and that's why you are here,
because I want people to understand the importance of having
specialties done the right way.
Speaker 6 (15:33):
Well, one stop, there's nothing that we don't do. We
don't do Tommy talks or surgery. But there's between the
two of us, there's not much that we don't do anyed.
The experience I have over thirty years, he has over
thirty years of experience.
Speaker 4 (15:49):
So together, and it's not the same thing that's going
to a med spot where you have a medical director
that they are to be on right.
Speaker 6 (15:57):
So as long as they have a medical director or whatnot,
they can say they're a medspot. But they could just
you know, have a medical grade product for skincare and
call themselves a med spot. So, you know, it's very vague.
If you do the regular day spots, it's mostly lashes
and things like that, facials, but anytime you have like
(16:19):
IVS or anything like that, that's a medical So there's
different regulations on one of that. So it can be
very deceiving. And that's why we do a lot of medicine.
We do more of a medical and we have a wonderful, exceptional,
the best medical institution anybody I ever asked for.
Speaker 4 (16:37):
It understand how important and how necessary is to follow
through with the postop or with the you know, extra care.
And Marianne, you're here, Marianne Negron, who has been also
a guest of Mind prior in another podcast, but today
you're joining us as part of the Dynamic Evolutions team.
(17:01):
And how is it, you know, for you to work
with these amazing doctors.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
And at the same time bring your expertise of you
know what you're doing.
Speaker 4 (17:12):
Like I just recently went through a lost weight program
with you guys. I did the semi glue tide you
were managing and following up with me weekly.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
I did well, I do all my boatox and whatnot.
Speaker 4 (17:26):
But also you just performed light postuction on my neck
and chin and an end the lift, which is a
laser treatment that it's like endo tight whatever it was.
It was like, like, I cannot tell you how fascinated
I was with the whole process.
Speaker 6 (17:43):
Is very unique because nobody has this, so we have
we're the only practice that has the dynamos, the Photona dynamos,
which is a laser from Slovenia. And this actually you
have this very hot, hot fiber going underneath your skin
and tightening.
Speaker 7 (18:00):
It as we left back just so.
Speaker 6 (18:05):
And you hear about the pedial threads, you know, things
like that.
Speaker 7 (18:11):
This is superior to that is.
Speaker 3 (18:14):
And it was not invasive at all. I mean, it
doesn't hurt. It doesn't hurt.
Speaker 4 (18:18):
I was under local anesthesia, which was fantastic. But let
me tell you what has made also a lot of
difference is Marianne has been taking care of me every
other day.
Speaker 3 (18:29):
And what is it that you're doing. You're doing some
like kind of treatments on my neck.
Speaker 10 (18:33):
Oh yeah, we do like our f treatment after your surgery.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
Radio frequency correct. What does that do that?
Speaker 10 (18:41):
It's going to distop all the liquids, the herd part
after the surgery. So and then we do the massage
like drain massage, so like take off all the terrain
and the stuff and your the lymphatic in your in
your skin. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (18:56):
And and not only that because when I went through
that weight loss.
Speaker 3 (18:59):
Also my young is doing this I don't know, how
do you call it with the.
Speaker 10 (19:04):
Wood the wood therapy.
Speaker 4 (19:06):
And kind of like bringing all the futs to the
right places like kind of I cannot tell you. People,
when you're listening to me, please understand that the amazing
medicine technology, knowledge, expertise.
Speaker 3 (19:24):
It's just it's just ex chordinary.
Speaker 4 (19:27):
And then I have to bring my good friend David
Artist to you use.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
When he saw me, he's like, what are you doing?
And everybody that's he's like, what are you doing?
Speaker 10 (19:37):
It?
Speaker 3 (19:37):
It's so great. I'm like, you have to come and
see my people.
Speaker 4 (19:39):
So when David came, he came with, you know, an
injury and.
Speaker 3 (19:43):
You guys injected stemselves. What what did that do to him?
To all the athletes that you say, he's not the
only one.
Speaker 6 (19:51):
There's a couple and all that Doctor Bolinas speak about
it too, But there there's it's like a twofold with David.
You know, David's all over the place, so it's like
sit still, sit still to heal.
Speaker 3 (20:02):
You know, he's busy guy.
Speaker 6 (20:04):
So we yes, we injected a certain stem cell into
his knee. We gave him a nice iv and we
also gave him ivy stem cells. He wanted the whole gamut,
so he got quite a bit that helps. The ivy
portion of it will help him heal systemically. Even crossed
into the brain and you know, in the spinal cord,
(20:25):
so it's very very potent.
Speaker 7 (20:28):
Okay, it does quite a bit of healing.
Speaker 3 (20:31):
And then.
Speaker 6 (20:34):
He how to do what he had to do. But
he was still having some issues. And it wasn't necessarily
his knee. It was his quadruscep because all those years
of pain in that knee caused his quadruscet to actually
but you.
Speaker 4 (20:50):
Know, like when I brought him to you guys, it's
because he was told he needed surgery exactly.
Speaker 7 (20:55):
He doesn't need surgery.
Speaker 4 (20:56):
What's amazing is that Marianne even took care of him
like you did.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
You know, it looks like a little kid to dynamic
evolution is just like a fun trip to the park.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
Yeah, I know that's important to bring up. I mean,
it's not that he was told something that wasn't considered important. However,
they were alternatives and and that's.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
The key part of what we offer.
Speaker 5 (21:27):
Yes, surgery is something that he could have had, and
maybe it would have been something benefit. But to go
undergo any surgical type of procedure number one is a
risk involved just with the anesthesia alone, and number two
not being able to be offered an alternative therapy. You know,
(21:49):
it's something that you know, we kind of feel is necessary,
and if it's not offered, we find it to be
tragic because people we see people do extra really.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Well with the alternative care.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
And alternative care.
Speaker 4 (22:05):
And that brings me to a situation that I've seen
in many cases, people go and get the care or
surgeries and they go to you know, Columbia that's the
go and then they come here they don't know.
Speaker 6 (22:22):
That's why they don't know that this is offered in
the US.
Speaker 4 (22:26):
Well they that And just for the people that are listening,
it's super important that you hear this. I learned through
you guys as well and through my experience with other
you know, doctors, when you go and get a surgery
done in another country and if something goes wrong, you
cannot touch the pap us.
Speaker 3 (22:48):
Doctors cannot touch the patient. Why is that?
Speaker 6 (22:51):
Because it's a liability the doctor, who who or whoever
whatever wherever the procedure was, should be followed up. So
I know there's a lot of women that go to
the Dominican to have or Columbia or what not to have.
Speaker 7 (23:07):
Libel section three sixties.
Speaker 6 (23:09):
But we've seen, we've been asked to see patients within
tummy talks, the whole bit the stitch is coming out.
Speaker 7 (23:16):
Now, that's a good liability for us to take.
Speaker 6 (23:19):
And no physician will take that unless you go to
the emergency seeing that you can't, because then you know
we're not First of all, we're not surgeons to do
that part, but there's not much we can do. And
once we see the person then we have to follow through.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
So if you were here, I go somewhere, my my
stitches come out, I come to you.
Speaker 3 (23:43):
And then if I'm saying, if you were to take
me now, you become my doctor.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
And if something goes wrong with those stitches, the new ones,
even though you're trying to fix something, now you're lying.
Speaker 3 (23:55):
Now it's your problem exactly. So that's why they don't
take care of you. Yeah, and so that's something.
Speaker 4 (24:00):
To really consider when like it's very inexpensive, somewhat inexpensive
to go get it done in another country, but then
when you come back.
Speaker 3 (24:08):
And that's something that I was talking to.
Speaker 11 (24:09):
Miami's like, yes, like everything afterwards is so important, and
people don't think they just think that having the surgery
is the bigger thing.
Speaker 3 (24:20):
It's not is that.
Speaker 12 (24:21):
After Listen, I've seen people in going to Miami and
you know, they go there thinking it's cheaper and they
come back worse, and I mean in bad shame to
you don't even have to go out of this country.
Speaker 6 (24:36):
You have to you know, you have to really evaluate
where you go. It's not the money. It's if you're
trying to nickel and die your health. You're going to
get what you pay for in anything in life.
Speaker 7 (24:48):
You're going to get well.
Speaker 4 (24:49):
Sometimes you pay a lot of money and it's still
not as good as it should be, right. And I
have a joke like because now with Lindsay Lohan in
the new phase that she.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Has, and everybody's like, we got to go to the
bar and we're gonna go to girls. You Ben, you don't,
you just go to dynamic Evolution. I'm telling you they
have that and more.
Speaker 4 (25:09):
I am just so surprised on all the different techniques
and technology that you guys have, and I keep mentioning
it because it's really outstanding.
Speaker 3 (25:19):
And there's not a lot of clinics like that anywhere.
Speaker 6 (25:22):
The The other thing that is unique with us too,
we actually partnered with a young couple that that are
the founders of this amazing it's called the Hyperbolic suit
Yes for exercise, and that's the next component that we
did with David.
Speaker 7 (25:40):
He actually bought the.
Speaker 6 (25:41):
Sue and between that and telling him, you know, it's
his IT band, this suit actually strengthened his quadrcept.
Speaker 3 (25:50):
And now you're working also with Matt with all Yes boxers.
You have Jamay Ortiz and you have like all these
other people that we've.
Speaker 6 (25:58):
Seen UFC fighters, we've professional athletes. We also use the
suit for medical purposes. We're working with the muscular district
young man who has improved his gait, his strength just
by using the suit. Because this suit actually you wear
it while you exercise, and it has pads in every
(26:21):
muscle group and.
Speaker 4 (26:21):
You're not talking about injecting anything or putting any chemicals
in your well.
Speaker 5 (26:26):
In his case, we do have to also add that
we had treated him for some deficiencies as well, so
it wasn't just the suit alone, and that was the
collaboration that occurred when I first spoke with the founder
and we you know, we realized the concept of synergy
between what we do and what this.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
Suit provides as well.
Speaker 5 (26:49):
So alone and of itself, this individual would not have
done the turnaround that he's doing without the other added
in Greek, and so it becomes a combination in many
ways of of of more than.
Speaker 1 (27:05):
Just one treatment same thing.
Speaker 5 (27:07):
In the case with mister Ortisse, you know, uh, the
injection of his knee was one thing, but then the
step up of of of of doing the hyperbolic suit.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
Too, because he was a lot aware of tear.
Speaker 5 (27:19):
These pro athletes and I had over the years, you know,
they're just insulting their body, you know with all these
uh uh activities and and and and you know, after
a while, you know, they break down, you know, and
uh and they're looking at longevity, and we're providing I believe,
longevity by the the use of like we mentioned themselves
(27:42):
and uh pharmones and cells.
Speaker 3 (27:45):
For those that do not know.
Speaker 5 (27:47):
Yeah, sure, Well it's it's a cell that can develop into, uh,
can differentiate into like other tissue for instance.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
Uh, let's take the knee wear and tear to need.
What does that mean?
Speaker 5 (28:02):
That means the cartilage tissue, which is a definitive tissue.
Stem cells can develop into that. No, no, no, it's natural. Yeah,
well that's a good question. The stem cells are all natural,
and it's it's developed from umbilical cord, you know, at birth,
So it has nothing to do with like abortions or
(28:24):
anything along those lines. In fact, it's it's gathered with
the permission.
Speaker 3 (28:30):
You know.
Speaker 4 (28:30):
I have my daughter's umbilical cord frozen because they told me, like,
if she ever gets sick, I can just tap into
it right.
Speaker 5 (28:39):
Exactly exactly so that that stem cell has this primitive
product which is then utilized in not just situations where
it's wear and tear, but disease states as well. And
that's that's extremely important because there's more studies and we're
involved or we want to get involved in studies that
(28:59):
we treat people who have Parkinson's disease, for instance, multiple sclerosis.
In fact, we're dealing with a client right now who
has been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, has been under the
care you know, of a major institute in Boston, and
although he was doing well with it, we feel after
he was being treated with a session of the stem cells,
(29:21):
he's doing better. In fact, he tells us he's better,
and so much so he's putting kind of like a
hold on what was being done for him before.
Speaker 4 (29:31):
And and going back to that technology and that you know,
mule stuff that you have and you offer Marianne, you
are also you know, an expert in hair restoration and
you do a micro pigmentation and I don't even know.
Speaker 6 (29:47):
She's an airjuss and yeah, really know, not just a
medical esthetician who who is doing hair things. She's actually
shes been a hairdresser for so long and now she's
using her talents because she can identifying skale better than any.
Speaker 4 (30:02):
Yeah, and demo have like hair situations like with men
that they tend to lose like hair in the front.
Speaker 10 (30:11):
Of the Yeah, I have like teny years of experience
like doing that, like take care of the people have
problem with loose hair. So I have a lot of
knowledge and too in that area, so I can combine
everything what I learned be part of Dynamic Elution with
the doctor and Christina, So that helped me to a
(30:33):
lot to bring everything to other level to take care
of the the loose hair for the people, like everything
like micropugmentation, different type of treatment life for help to
grow back the hair and all that stuff.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
That's amazing.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
So if if you ever find yourselves people remember Boston.
You are in the state of the art, state where
technology is advancing, where medicine from Harvard Medical to Talks,
we have all these amazing organizations and schools. Come to
(31:11):
Dynamic Evolution just to learn or just go visit them.
Speaker 3 (31:15):
On your website. You can just share the website, but
it's so.
Speaker 4 (31:19):
Important to me to share these because it's available right here.
You guys are an inspiration to me because not only
are you trendsetters and innovative in the medical world.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
But also you're changing lives. You have changed my life.
Speaker 4 (31:35):
You have changed my self esteem, You have changed the
way I feel about myself, how I look at myself.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
I share these because it goes beyond the medical, It goes.
Speaker 4 (31:47):
To emotional too. And if I can help other persons,
another person.
Speaker 3 (31:53):
Feel the way that I feel, that's my mission is accomplished.
And the way that.
Speaker 4 (31:59):
You as a team, the diversity on services and experience
that you offer, if people could experience it, they will
have a completely different life. So I want to thank
you very much for.
Speaker 8 (32:13):
Making me beautiful, feel beautiful and healthy.
Speaker 4 (32:17):
Most importantly, also you know my family because you see
my family as well as my friends. But also for
sharing all that you do and what people can find
here in the United States without traveling to any other country.
Go visit the expertise of doctor Baianas of Christina Knight,
(32:38):
who owns Dynamic Devolution, and also Marianne's Post Operative Care
or post protocol or service treatment Care. They are amazing.
Thank you so much for being with me. And this
is not over. You have to come back because I
have so much.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
To talk about.
Speaker 6 (32:55):
Yeah, So we're located in Norwood right at the Memorial Airport.
Speaker 7 (33:00):
Plenty of parking, which is a big thing.
Speaker 6 (33:02):
When you go to certain places, especially in the city,
you can't park and by the time you leave, it
casts you more for parking maybe than a procedure. But
it's easy to get to, not far. And if you
leave a certain time during the day, because we know traffic,
you can always time it right. But we're at one
on one Access Road, Suite one B in Norwood, Massachusetts.
(33:24):
Dynamic Evolutions and Health and Beauty and check us out
on Facebook. Dynamic Evolutions dot Com is our website and
we're also on Instagram and YouTube, and.
Speaker 4 (33:34):
You'll have all details on our podcasts and radio station
as well. So thank you again guys for being my
guest today.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
Thank you for having me.
Speaker 4 (33:44):
And this is where everything happens. I'm bringing you the
top and the best of the best. We'll see you
next week.
Speaker 3 (33:51):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
Okay, hey Luke Qimo episodio the Okay passa sea room bar.
Speaker 1 (34:03):
When they see it, they see it, they boom too.
Come