The FINANCIAL — As people age their bones lose density and, especially in women after the menopause, become more brittle. The new method developed by researchers from the University’s Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease offers the possibility of more effective treatment than currently available.
Professor Jonathan Jarvis of Liverpool John Moores University designed miniature muscle pacemakers that were used in the University of Liverpool labs to produce contractions in the muscles of the legs of rats over 28 days, according to University of Liverpool.
University of Liverpool PhD student Paula Vickerton led the research. “Bone disease and fragility are affecting an increasing proportion of our population. However, existing treatments are non-specific, affecting whole bones and not just the weaker regions,” she said.
Using the muscle pacing method the rats gained 30 percent of bone within the targeted areas, according to University of Liverpool.
“This method has been shown to increase the amount of bone and raises the possibility of being developed into a treatment for people who are at risk of the many complications that weakened bone can bring,” Paula’s supervisor, Dr Nathan Jeffery said.
Discussion about this post