Anti-Aging Clinic in Wynwood & Midtown
Hormone optimization, body composition work with GLP-1 protocols, and integrated aesthetic care for the Wynwood and Midtown community. Our clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street — walkable from much of the corridor.
Why Wynwood & Midtown Residents Choose Rewind
Wynwood and Midtown form Miami's creative and hospitality corridor — murals along NW 2nd Avenue, the Wynwood Walls, the gallery and event culture, the breweries and restaurants, the tech and startup density that has settled in alongside the arts. Midtown to the north anchors residential life with the Shops at Midtown, the Buena Vista corridor, and the Design District just east. Daily life here is walkable and dense; many residents work, eat, train, and live within a few blocks. Our clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street, inside this corridor.
The patients we see from Wynwood and Midtown often share a specific frame: consistent training, reasonable nutrition, and good sleep most of the time — but body composition that doesn't track the effort, energy that flags before the day is over, and an awareness that personal presentation is part of how their professional and social life works. The inputs are there; the outputs are inconsistent. That gap is usually where the bloodwork comes in.
Being the local clinic for this corridor matters more than it might sound. A meaningful portion of our patient base walks in or rides in from a few blocks away. That proximity supports the kind of ongoing relationship that telehealth-only care can't replicate: in-house body composition scans repeated over months for trend data, walk-in IV therapy and NAD+ infusions on a flexible schedule, aesthetic touch-ups between meetings, and face-to-face consultations with the same clinical team across visits. The neighborhood is built into how the clinic actually operates.
Every Rewind patient starts with the same systematic workup. A comprehensive intake — symptoms, history, medications, sleep, training, work 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. 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 Wynwood and Midtown patients, the medical and aesthetic sides of care belong in the same conversation rather than separate visits. Body composition optimization is the foundation: hormone optimization changes how the body responds to training, recovery, and the diet patterns already in place; GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide function as body composition tools when calibrated for lean mass preservation rather than scale weight alone. Once the foundation is dialed in — when the bloodwork is reading the way it should and body composition is moving in the direction the work is supposed to produce — aesthetic care becomes the finishing layer when patients want it. Botox dosed to soften without freezing, conservative filler placement that keeps the face's structure intact. The order is foundation first, aesthetics as complement, never as a package.
Our clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street, inside the Wynwood corridor and a short walk from much of the neighborhood. There is no commute argument to make on this page; the practical question for most Wynwood and Midtown patients is scheduling, not distance. Most ongoing care after the initial workup can still be handled via telehealth — convenient for established patients managing busy calendars — but for patients who can stop in, the in-person option is two blocks away. Bloodwork can be drawn on-site or at any nearby Quest or LabCorp location.
Services for Wynwood & Midtown Patients
Aesthetic care is often where the relationship begins for patients in this corridor — but the body composition and hormonal foundation is what makes the aesthetic work hold up.
Aesthetic Treatments
Botox, Dysport, dermal fillers, and lip filler. Calibrated to your stage — prevention and maintenance for younger patients, conservative refinement for those further along.
Hormone Therapy
Testosterone therapy, female HRT, and enclomiphene. The foundation when bloodwork shows drift — testosterone, estradiol, thyroid, cortisol, and metabolic markers calibrated together.
Medical Weight Loss
Semaglutide, tirzepatide, tesofensine, and lipotropic injections — used as body composition tools with lean mass preservation as the design priority, not scale weight alone.
Peptide Therapy
CJC-1295/Ipamorelin for sleep architecture and growth hormone support. BPC-157/TB-500 for tissue and joint recovery. Sourced through 503A compounding pharmacies under patient-specific prescriptions.
IV Therapy & NAD+
IV nutrient infusions and NAD+ for cellular energy, immune support, and recovery. Pairs naturally with the late-night and high-output rhythm of the neighborhood.
Sexual Health
ED treatment, ED medications, PT-141, and female sexual health. Often connected to hormonal status and treated as part of the broader optimization picture, not in isolation.
Walking or Driving to the Clinic
Our clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street, Miami, FL 33127, inside the Wynwood corridor. For most Wynwood and Midtown patients, getting here is a short walk or a five-minute drive.
Walking from the Wynwood Arts District
From the Wynwood Walls or anywhere along NW 2nd Avenue between 23rd and 26th Streets, the clinic at 24 NW 29th Street is a 5-10 minute walk north. NW 2nd Avenue runs straight to the door. Most of the Wynwood patient base walks in.
From Midtown Miami or Buena Vista
From the Midtown corridor (NE 36th Street area), the clinic is a 5-minute drive south on N Miami Avenue or NW 2nd Avenue. Easy parking on side streets and in nearby paid lots.
From the Design District or Edgewater
Short drive (5-10 minutes) west or south. From the Design District, head south on NE 2nd Avenue and west on 29th Street. From Edgewater, take any cross street west to NW 2nd Avenue and head north to 29th.
The Wynwood + Midtown Health Landscape
The Wynwood and Midtown corridor has matured rapidly over the past decade — from warehouse district to creative-class neighborhood with restaurants, galleries, tech offices, and residential towers stitched together. The hospitality and event density brings late-night and high-output rhythms; the tech and creative-industry presence brings demanding calendars and travel patterns. Conventional medical care in the immediate area is sparse — most residents commute to Mercy, Baptist, or the UM medical infrastructure for primary care and specialists.
What's harder to find locally is integrative care that combines hormone optimization, body composition support, and aesthetic work as a single coordinated practice. Most local options handle one piece — a med spa, a primary care office, a weight loss vendor — without the bloodwork depth or the integrated design. Rewind sits in the corridor specifically because the integrated approach is what this neighborhood tends to want.
Lab logistics from Wynwood and Midtown are straightforward. Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp both have draw stations within a short walk or 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 Wynwood and Midtown patients, the IV therapy and NAD+ infusion work pairs well with the late-night and high-output lifestyle the neighborhood supports — recovery after travel, immune support during high-output weeks, cellular optimization for patients running at pace.
Why Wynwood & Midtown Patients Choose Rewind
Body composition and hormone optimization as the foundation, aesthetic care as the finishing layer, and a clinic that's right in the neighborhood.
Built for the High-Visibility Lifestyle
For patients whose professional and social environment makes both performance and appearance visible. Body composition optimization and aesthetic care designed to work together, not in parallel.
Foundation-First Care Design
Hormonal and metabolic optimization is the foundation. Aesthetic care is the finishing layer when patients want it. The order matters — and the protocol respects it.
Body Composition as the Frame
GLP-1 protocols and hormone optimization treated as body composition tools — calibrated to lean mass preservation and metabolic flexibility rather than scale weight alone.
The Whole Picture
Hormones, metabolic markers, body composition, and aesthetic outcomes treated as one connected picture. The bloodwork makes the integration possible.
Telehealth-Friendly After the First Visit
In-person initial workup, then most ongoing care — hormone therapy, peptides, weight loss, lab reviews — handled via telehealth. The walkable option is there when you want it.
Right in the Neighborhood
The clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street — inside the Wynwood corridor, walkable from much of the neighborhood, and a short drive from Midtown, the Design District, and Edgewater.
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 social demands, body composition goals. We map the system before we touch anything.
Comprehensive Bloodwork
Hormones, thyroid, metabolic, lipids, inflammatory markers, micronutrients. On-site at our Wynwood clinic or at any nearby Quest or LabCorp.
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 — or in-person if you prefer to walk in.
Walk-In or Telehealth — Both Work
For Wynwood and Midtown patients, the walk-in option is part of the appeal — the clinic is right in the neighborhood. After the initial in-person workup, hormone therapy, peptide protocols, weight loss management, and lab reviews can all be conducted via telehealth consultations for patients with busy calendars or travel patterns. Bloodwork can be drawn on-site or at any nearby Quest or LabCorp.
In-person visits are required for all aesthetic treatments, IV therapy, NAD+ infusions, and full-body MRI imaging.
Frequently Asked Questions
I'm in the gym consistently and eating well, but body composition isn't responding the way it used to. What's usually driving that?
When inputs are good and outputs aren't, the most common explanation is that one or more hormonal or metabolic systems has drifted underneath what training and nutrition can solve. Testosterone or estradiol fluctuation, thyroid drift, cortisol patterns out of normal rhythm, insulin sensitivity changes, and ferritin status all affect how your body responds to the same effort that used to produce results. The workup is the only way to know which of these is the actual driver in your specific case. A comprehensive hormone and metabolic panel — total and free testosterone, estradiol, SHBG, full thyroid (TSH, free T3, free T4, antibodies), cortisol patterns, A1c, fasting insulin, ferritin, lipids — paired with body composition assessment maps where the system has drifted. From there, the protocol addresses what the data shows, not what a default template suggests. Training stays in the picture; the workup just tells us why the same training is producing different results.
I'm in my 30s. Is hormone optimization actually relevant at this stage, or is that for older patients?
The framing of "too young" is the wrong question; the right one is whether your specific bloodwork shows drift. In our clinical experience, subclinical hormonal changes in the 30s are common — testosterone and estradiol can fluctuate well before the textbook age-related decline curves; thyroid drift can begin in the 30s for people who never had thyroid history; sleep, stress, and training intensity all push these markers around. Many of the patients we see in their 30s come in because something specific has shifted — energy that doesn't recover, training that produces less, sleep that used to come easily. The question we can answer with bloodwork is whether what they're noticing is hormonal, metabolic, or something else. Plenty of 30-something patients run their panel and find everything is in good shape; the workup confirms baseline and gives them a year-over-year reference point. Others find drift that's worth addressing now. Either outcome is useful — the bloodwork is the answer, not the age.
GLP-1 medications keep coming up for weight loss, but I'm not obese. Is there a use case for someone who just wants to change body composition?
Yes, in specific cases — but the framing matters. GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide work primarily through appetite regulation and metabolic effects, which can shift body composition when used as part of a protocol designed around lean mass preservation rather than scale weight alone. The candidate criteria matter. They're appropriate for patients with metabolic resistance, insulin sensitivity issues, or stalled body composition that nutrition and training haven't moved. They're not appropriate for patients in a healthy body composition range looking for additional aesthetic optimization, where the risks (lean mass loss, GI side effects, dependence patterns) outweigh the benefit. When we use GLP-1 medications for body composition rather than weight loss, the protocol pairs them with structured protein targets, resistance training, and follow-up bloodwork to confirm lean mass is preserved. The medication is one tool among several; whether it fits depends on what the workup shows.
I want to look sharp, not done. What does that look like for someone in their 30s or 40s?
For younger patients, aesthetic care is usually about prevention and maintenance rather than correction. Botox dosed conservatively to soften early dynamic lines before they etch in — the brow still moves freely, expressions still read normally, the goal is to delay rather than reverse. Filler placed in small volumes to support structure where age-related volume loss is starting to show, not to add volume that wasn't there. We say no to requests that would over-treat for the patient's stage. For patients in their 30s, the conversation is often about whether to start at all and how lightly to begin; for patients in their 40s, it's usually small additions to maintain what's already in place. Most of our aesthetic patients leave looking like themselves on a particularly good day. The goal is for nobody to notice anything specific, just that you look well.
You're in Wynwood — can I just come in?
Yes. The clinic is at 24 NW 29th Street, walkable from much of Wynwood and a short drive from Midtown, the Design District, and Edgewater. New patient consultations typically can be booked within a few days. Same-week booking is often available for established patients. The first visit runs 45-60 minutes — comprehensive intake, bloodwork on-site if needed, consultation with your provider. After the initial workup, follow-ups for hormone therapy, peptide protocols, weight loss management, and lab reviews can all be handled via telehealth — convenient for established patients who don't need to come in for every adjustment. Aesthetic treatments, IV therapy, and NAD+ infusions always require an in-person visit, but for Wynwood and Midtown patients, walking over is part of the appeal.
Foundation First, Aesthetic Layer When You're Ready
Body composition and hormone optimization built on what the bloodwork actually shows, with aesthetic care as the finishing layer when the foundation is in place. Our clinic is right in the neighborhood — walk in or schedule a virtual consult.
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.