PRP Injections

Reviewed by Greg Jaroszynski MD, FRCSC | Last updated May 2026

Platelet-rich plasma, or PRP, is prepared from a sample of the patient's own blood and injected into or around a painful musculoskeletal structure when the diagnosis and goals make it appropriate.

How PRP is used

PRP is used as part of a non-surgical program for selected joint and tendon problems. The goal is usually to reduce pain, improve function, and support rehabilitation. PRP is not the same as a steroid injection and is not intended to simply numb the area.

Where PRP may be considered

What the evidence suggests

Recent systematic reviews and network meta-analyses generally suggest that PRP may provide better medium-term symptom improvement than corticosteroid or hyaluronic acid for many patients with knee osteoarthritis, although preparation methods and patient selection vary. For tendinopathy, evidence is condition-specific and results are not guaranteed.

Practical expectations

PRP often causes a short period of post-injection soreness. Improvement, when it occurs, is usually gradual rather than immediate. It should be combined with appropriate activity modification, strengthening, weight management when relevant, and physiotherapy or a home exercise program.

Important: Injection treatment should be matched to the diagnosis, physical examination, imaging, health history, and goals. It is usually used to reduce symptoms and improve function, not to guarantee tissue regrowth or cure a structural problem.

More injection information

For a broader explanation of injection choices, evidence limits, safety issues, and references, review the main Injection Therapy section.