Anti-Aging Clinic Serving Edgewater
Hormone optimization, body composition work, and aesthetic care designed for career-peak professionals noticing the first signs of drift. 5-10 minutes west to our Wynwood clinic — and most ongoing care happens via telehealth.
Why Edgewater Residents Choose Rewind
Edgewater is the bayfront condo corridor between Wynwood and Brickell — high-rise residential, walkable, anchored by Margaret Pace Park and the bayfront waterfront. The Performing Arts area sits just south, the Design District just north. Daily life here is dense and walkable: many residents go without a car, work nearby or downtown, and use the bayfront, the park, and the surrounding neighborhood walkability as part of how they live. Edgewater sits between Brickell's corporate density and Wynwood's creative scene without being either — its own urban-professional rhythm.
The patients we see from Edgewater often share a specific frame: performing well at career peak, output sustained, but starting to notice the first signs of margin shrinking. Recovery that takes longer. Focus that fades earlier. Body composition that drifts despite consistent effort. The anxiety isn't about decline being obvious — it's about catching the early slippage before it is. The instinct is to address it now, while values are still drifting, rather than wait for the trough to make itself unmistakable.
Every Rewind patient starts with the same systematic workup. A comprehensive intake — symptoms, history, medications, sleep, training, work and travel demands. A baseline executive-grade hormone and metabolic panel, with body composition assessment where relevant. From that data, our clinical team designs a protocol grounded in what your specific biology shows, not a treatment menu picked from a shelf. For career-peak patients, the panel matters as much for what it rules out as for what it confirms — establishing baseline against actual data is the foundation for measuring drift over time. Follow-up bloodwork at defined intervals — six to eight weeks, three months, every six months thereafter — confirms the protocol is working and surfaces adjustments before symptoms return.
For most Edgewater patients, the through-line is career-peak output meeting first hormonal drift. Sustained performance across a high-demand professional life depends on systems — testosterone, estradiol, thyroid, cortisol, metabolic flexibility, recovery — that begin shifting earlier than most patients expect. Subclinical drift in any of these often shows up as exactly the symptom pattern Edgewater patients describe: performing well overall, with margins narrowing in ways that don't track to lifestyle changes you can point to. The clinical case for addressing drift at this stage is straightforward: optimization at the subclinical layer is easier and more durable than waiting for values to bottom out. The goal isn't to treat a problem that isn't there yet; it's to catch the actual change while it's still shifting and address it before the curve crosses into the symptom range that disrupts how you live and work.
Our clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street in Wynwood, a 5-10 minute drive or rideshare west from most of Edgewater. The proximity makes in-person visits easy when needed, but most ongoing care after the initial workup is handled via telehealth — convenient for unpredictable professional calendars. Same-week scheduling is typically available for established patients booking aesthetic treatments, IV therapy, or follow-up consultations. Bloodwork can be drawn at any nearby Quest or LabCorp — many within walking distance for Edgewater residents.
Services for Edgewater Patients
Hormone optimization is the entry point for most Edgewater patients. Body composition, peptide protocols, aesthetic care, and IV therapy add as the relationship develops.
Hormone Therapy
Testosterone therapy, female HRT, and enclomiphene calibrated to early drift in career-peak patients. Comprehensive panel reads what standard physicals miss.
Medical Weight Loss
Semaglutide, tirzepatide, tesofensine, and lipotropic injections — designed for body composition work that fits travel, client dinners, and irregular schedules.
Peptide Therapy
CJC-1295/Ipamorelin for sleep architecture and recovery. BPC-157/TB-500 for tissue and joint repair. Sermorelin and tesamorelin for the GH-axis layer in high-output patients.
Aesthetic Treatments
Botox, Dysport, dermal fillers, and lip filler. Calibrated for professional visibility — current and sharp, never overdone. Maintenance rather than correction.
Sexual Health
ED treatment, ED medications, PT-141, and female sexual health. Frequently connected to early hormonal drift and treated as part of the broader optimization picture.
IV Therapy & NAD+
IV nutrient infusions and NAD+ for cellular energy, immune support, and recovery. Pairs naturally with travel-heavy professional schedules and high-output rhythms.
Getting from Edgewater to Wynwood
Our clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street, Miami, FL 33127. Edgewater to Wynwood is one of the shortest drives in our service area — a 5-10 minute trip west across the FEC railway tracks.
From the bayfront condo corridor (NE 23rd-36th Street range)
From Aria on the Bay, Paramount Bay, Bay House, or any of the bayfront residential towers, head west on any cross street to N Miami Avenue or NE 2nd Avenue, then north a few blocks to NW 29th Street. Total: 5-10 minutes by car or rideshare.
From Margaret Pace Park or the Performing Arts area
Cross under I-395 westbound on Biscayne Boulevard, head north to NE 29th Street, then west across the FEC tracks to the clinic. Total: 5-8 minutes. Many Edgewater patients combine the visit with errands or dining nearby.
Walking from northern Edgewater
From the northern end of the corridor (NE 36th Street area), the clinic is a 15-20 minute walk west on 29th Street. For patients living north of 30th, walking is sometimes the easiest option.
The Edgewater Health Landscape
Edgewater sits in a medical-care corridor without being centered on it. Mercy Hospital and the broader bayfront medical infrastructure are short drives south; the Adrienne Arsht Center and the Performing Arts area sit just south. Most Edgewater residents already maintain primary care relationships in Brickell, downtown, or the UM medical system — Rewind sits as the optimization layer alongside that conventional care rather than replacing it.
What's harder to find locally is integrative care designed around the early-drift stage — patients who are still performing well but want to address the first signs of hormonal or metabolic change before they become limiting. Most local options are either retail aesthetics or full-service primary care; the optimization-focused depth for career-peak patients is what brings Edgewater residents to Rewind.
Lab logistics from Edgewater are straightforward. Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp both have draw stations within walking distance or a short drive. We send requisitions ahead of your appointment so bloodwork happens on your schedule, and we handle the back-and-forth with the labs directly. For patients who prefer it, on-site bloodwork is available at the clinic.
For Edgewater patients, the IV therapy and NAD+ infusion work pairs well with the travel patterns common in the corridor — recovery after international or cross-country trips, immune support during high-output weeks, cellular optimization for the cumulative load of sustained career-peak performance.
Why Edgewater Patients Choose Rewind
Built for career-peak patients catching the first signs of drift — clinical management of subclinical change, designed around irregular professional schedules.
Built for Career-Peak Drift
For patients performing well who notice the first signs of margin shrinking. The workup names what is actually shifting underneath — early, before the trough.
Early Intervention Over Late Repair
Subclinical drift is easier to address than a full hormonal trough. Catching the change while values are still drifting beats waiting for the symptom curve to crash.
Body Composition for Real Schedules
Protocols built around travel, client dinners, and irregular hours — not around perfect dietary control or rigid training windows. GLP-1 calibrated to lean mass preservation.
Same-Week Scheduling
Established patients can book aesthetic treatments, IV therapy, and consultations within a few days. For unpredictable calendars, flexible booking is part of the design.
The Whole Picture
Hormones, metabolic markers, body composition, cognitive symptoms, and aesthetic outcomes treated as one connected picture rather than isolated complaints.
5–10 Minutes from Edgewater
A short drive or rideshare west to the Wynwood clinic. Telehealth covers most ongoing care for established patients, so the in-person visits stay infrequent and predictable.
What to Expect at Rewind
Your initial appointment runs 45-60 minutes. Here is how it works.
Full Health Intake
Symptoms, history, medications, sleep, training, work and travel patterns, body composition and cognitive concerns. We map the system before we touch anything.
Comprehensive Bloodwork
Hormones, thyroid, metabolic, lipids, inflammatory markers, micronutrients. On-site or at any nearby Quest or LabCorp — many within walking distance for Edgewater residents.
Consultation
Your provider reviews findings, names what is actually driving your symptom or body composition pattern, and walks through protocol options grounded in what the data shows.
Treatment + Follow-Up Cadence
Protocol begins. Initial follow-up bloodwork at 6-8 weeks, then 3 months, then semi-annual. Most ongoing visits can be telehealth.
Telehealth for Unpredictable Schedules
Edgewater is close to the clinic, but unpredictable professional calendars often make even short in-person visits hard to commit to. After the initial in-person workup, most ongoing care for hormone therapy, peptides, weight loss, and lab reviews can be conducted via telehealth consultations. Bloodwork can be drawn at any nearby Quest or LabCorp on your schedule.
In-person visits are required for all aesthetic treatments, IV therapy, NAD+ infusions, and full-body MRI imaging. For these, same-week scheduling is typically available for established patients.
Frequently Asked Questions
I'm in my late 30s, performing well, but something is starting to slip — energy, focus, recovery. Is that hormonal, or am I just busy?
It's a fair question, and the honest answer is that the only way to know is the bloodwork. In our clinical experience, the symptoms patients describe as "I'm just busy" — energy that doesn't recover the way it used to, focus that fades earlier in the day, training that produces less than it did a year ago — frequently turn out to have a measurable hormonal or metabolic component. Testosterone, estradiol, thyroid (TSH and free T3/T4), cortisol patterns, fasting insulin, ferritin, and SHBG all interact with how you feel and perform. Some patients run their panel and find everything is in good shape — busy is just busy, and the workup gives them a baseline reference point. Others find drift that's worth addressing now. Either outcome is useful: the panel either rules out hormonal causes or names them. What it doesn't do is leave you guessing.
My lifestyle makes diet and schedule hard to control — travel, client dinners, irregular hours. Can body composition work actually happen in that context?
Yes, and the patients we see in this exact pattern are common. Body composition protocols designed for irregular schedules don't depend on perfect dietary control or rigid training windows. The workup starts with metabolic markers — fasting insulin, A1c, lipid particles, thyroid, hormones — to identify what's actually driving the body composition pattern. From there, the protocol is built around what your schedule will actually support. GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide work through appetite regulation and metabolic effects, which can shift body composition without requiring strict dietary restriction; we calibrate them to lean mass preservation rather than scale weight alone. Resistance training even at modest frequency (two to three short sessions per week) is enough to protect lean mass during the protocol. The point isn't to demand a lifestyle you can't sustain; it's to design around what your real life actually looks like.
Focus and cognitive sharpness — is that something hormone optimization actually addresses, or is that overselling it?
It's a real connection but worth being careful about. Testosterone, thyroid hormones, and cortisol all have established cognitive components — they affect attention, processing speed, mood stability, and the energy that supports sustained focus. When the workup identifies low or out-of-range values in any of these, optimization frequently improves the cognitive symptoms patients describe. That said, we don't promise specific cognitive outcomes. Plenty of factors contribute to focus and sharpness besides hormones — sleep architecture, stress load, nutrition, training, alcohol intake, and other variables matter alongside the hormonal layer. What we can honestly say is this: if your bloodwork shows drift, addressing it often helps with the cognitive symptoms patients describe, but it isn't a guaranteed nootropic effect. The workup tells us whether there's a hormonal driver to address; the outcome depends on what we find.
I want to look sharp for professional and social visibility — but I'm not looking for a dramatic change. What's the right level of aesthetic care for someone at this stage?
For established professionals who want to look current and sharp without making a change anyone notices, the right level is maintenance and subtle enhancement. Botox dosed conservatively to keep dynamic lines from setting deeper without freezing expression — the goal is rested, not unmoved. Filler in small, well-placed volumes to maintain the structural definition that's already there, rather than adding volume that wasn't. We say no to requests that would over-treat for the patient's stage. The frame for Edgewater patients is usually "keep me looking like myself, just sharp" — small, regular, and well-calibrated rather than infrequent and dramatic. Most aesthetic patients leave looking like themselves on a particularly good day; nobody at the office or the dinner notices anything specific, just that you look well.
My schedule is unpredictable. How does ongoing care actually work for someone who can't commit to regular in-person visits?
After the initial in-person workup, most ongoing care is handled via telehealth — hormone therapy follow-ups, peptide refills, weight loss management, lab reviews, dose adjustments. For Edgewater patients, the typical pattern is one in-person initial visit (45-60 minutes), then telehealth check-ins every 8-12 weeks early on and every 3-6 months once stable. Bloodwork can be drawn at any nearby Quest or LabCorp on your schedule, often within walking distance for Edgewater residents. Aesthetic treatments, IV therapy, and NAD+ infusions always require an in-person visit, but for those, we offer same-week scheduling for established patients. The infrastructure is built for patients whose calendars don't allow predictable monthly office visits.
Catch the Drift Before the Trough
For career-peak professionals noticing the first signs of margin shrinking. The workup names what's actually changing; the protocol addresses it while it's still drifting, not after it bottoms out. Our Wynwood clinic is 5-10 minutes west.
Medical Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. All treatments carry potential risks and are not appropriate for everyone. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any treatment program.