A viva, in the medical education sense, is a structured oral examination on a single clinical topic. The bank below contains six representative viva questions drawn from the four clinical capsules, with the answer the platform expects a certified staff member to give. The bank is illustrative rather than exhaustive; the full bank is part of the platform deliverable to partners and runs to several dozen questions per clinical capsule.
/ FUNDAMENTALS
Tell me what SVF actually is, in one sentence, without using the word "stem".
A heterogeneous pool of cells extracted from adipose tissue, including adipose-derived progenitors, endothelial precursors, pericytes, and immune-modulating cells, prepared by minimal manipulation at point of care. The pool, not any single cell, does the work.
/ KNEE
A patient is KL IV bone-on-bone. What do you say to them?
That SVF is not the right tool for their disease stage and that the honest answer is a surgical consultation for joint replacement. Offering SVF here would be selling hope, not medicine. The conversation is the same length whether the answer is yes or no.
/ SPINE
Why does the platform not offer SVF for radicular pain?
Because the mechanism does not fit the problem. Radicular pain is mechanical nerve-root compression. SVF acts through paracrine modulation of the tissue environment. Decompression, not regenerative signalling, is the appropriate intervention. The wrong tool for the right problem is the wrong tool.
/ SPORTS
An athlete has an acute hamstring strain and wants SVF. What do you say?
That SVF is not an acute-injury therapy. The native healing response handles the acute strain given appropriate rehabilitation. If a chronic or recurrent pattern develops at the same site over the coming months, the SVF conversation becomes appropriate. Acute strain is a rehabilitation question, not a regenerative one.
/ BUSINESS
A patient asks if SVF is FDA approved. How do you answer?
By distinguishing the regulatory frame. SVF prepared by minimal manipulation at point of care is positioned within the FDA's homologous use framework rather than as an approved drug. Approved is not the right word; "regulated tissue" is the right phrase. A printed information sheet is offered for a deeper read.
/ OSCE
A patient says "my friend got stem cells and it cured her knee". What do you say?
Acknowledge the friend's experience without contradicting it, then re-frame: every regenerative procedure is a different cell preparation, different indication, different patient. The platform's intervention is described on its own evidence, not on anyone else's anecdote. The friend's story is information, not a prescription.