Reading Time: <1 minuteExosome infusions are being advertised in a flashy way at many beauty clinics, attracting customers and being performed like a magic infusion. The government has finally put a stop to them! This applies not only to beauty clinics, but also to companies that sell exosome reagents. Treating reagents as if they were medicines that are guaranteed to be effective and safe is a fraudulent act. Please look at the careers of the doctors who are advertising exosome infusions in a flashy way. Very few of them have been involved in regenerative medicine research. To put it bluntly, they suddenly become self-proclaimed cosmetic surgeons without going through research or clinical practice in multiple fields, and leave exosome infusions to nurses just because they can make money. Or, clinic owners who are not doctors hire part-time doctors and perform exosome infusions in situations where there are no doctors in the medical institution, and these outrageous medical practices are actually being carried out. There is no safety evidence protocol or effectiveness for exosome infusions. Or rather, because it is not standardized, the standard values and safety of each company are absurd. It cannot be said that anaphylactic shock will never occur when receiving exosome infusion at a medical institution where a doctor is not present. The reason is that antibiotics may be used when manufacturing exosome reagents. There are people who are allergic to certain antibiotics, and if such patients receive an infusion, they may experience a severe allergic reaction called anaphylaxis, which can lead to death. In any case, the flashy exosome business of beauty clinics these days is a problem.