๐—˜๐˜…๐—ฐ๐—น๐˜‚๐˜€๐—ถ๐˜ƒ๐—ฒ ๐—ฃ๐—น๐—ฒ๐—ป๐—ฎ๐—ฟ๐˜† ๐—–๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ฝ๐˜‚๐—ป ๐—›๐—ฒ๐—ฎ๐—น๐˜๐—ต๐—”๐—œ๐Ÿฎ๐Ÿฌ๐Ÿฎ๐Ÿฒ
๐——๐—ถ๐˜€๐—ฐ๐—ผ๐˜‚๐—ป๐˜ ๐—–๐—ผ๐—ฑ๐—ฒ: PLENARY20OFF
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Join us to explore how intelligent systems are improving patient outcomes.

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How to build a digital โ€˜twinโ€™ of the human brain โ€“ what existing models overlook | The-14

Digital brain twins could transform medicine, but new research shows current models miss key dynamics, limiting true personalization and accurate predictions.

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Osteoporosis Is Not โ€œSolved,โ€ But Bone-Building Medicine Is Getting Sharper

Illustration of osteoporosis

Article body:
Dear Cherubs, osteoporosis is not a character flaw, a moral lesson, or the skeletonโ€™s passive-aggressive way of sending calendar reminders. It is a disease in which more bone is broken down than replaced, and the National Institute on Aging says people often do not notice it until a fracture appears in the hip, spine, or wrist. Bones are living tissue, not dead scaffolding, which is why the whole thing feels so unfair.

  • The headline about a University of Tokyo drug that โ€œreactivatesโ€ bone formation sounds thrilling, because a pill that rebuilds bone is the kind of news that makes every other osteoporosis story look like beige wallpaper. But the current evidence base is more grounded: modern guidelines already include bone-building therapies for some high-risk patients, alongside treatments that slow bone loss and lower fracture risk.

    THE REAL PICTURE

    Bisphosphonates remain first-line for many high-risk patients, while anabolic therapies such as teriparatide and abaloparatide are recommended for women at very high fracture risk, and romosozumab is recommended in selective cases. In other words, medicine has already moved beyond pure โ€œmaintenance,โ€ even if the progress is less cinematic than a miracle-cure press release.

    Teriparatide, for example, is FDA-indicated to increase bone mass in high-risk men and treat high-risk postmenopausal women; that is not exactly the paperwork for a placebo with vitamins. These drugs are serious tools, but they are not magic wands, and that distinction matters when the internet starts dressing every promising molecule in a superhero cape.

    That does not mean bone regeneration is hype. It means the bar is high, because a drug that builds bone still has to prove that it actually prevents fractures, works in real patients, and does not trade one problem for another. The Endocrine Society notes that romosozumab should not be used in people at high cardiovascular risk, which is exactly the sort of fine print that keeps regulators from letting excitement outrun evidence.

    THE FINE PRINT

    So when people frame this as โ€œbureaucracy versus healing,โ€ the real story is messier. Regulation is the unglamorous part where science has to survive contact with side effects, dosing rules, long-term follow-up, and ordinary human biologyโ€”always a killjoy, but also the reason medicine does not run on vibes alone. That said, the system can still be slow, expensive, and frustrating, especially when a promising therapy spends years moving from lab notebook to prescription pad.

    University of Tokyo researchers have published osteoporosis-related drug-design work, including a 2023 press release describing a receptor-activation mode that could help design drugs for osteoporosis. That is promising science, but it is not the same thing as a proven, broadly available cure for advanced disease. The gap between those two headlines is where most of the real work lives.

    For patients, the useful takeaway is not โ€œwait for the miracle.โ€ It is: get screened, treat earlier when risk is high, and ask whether your plan is aimed only at slowing loss or also at rebuilding bone where appropriate. NIAMS says the goals are to slow or stop bone loss and prevent fractures; the good news is that those goals are already real. The better news is that bone-building options exist now, even if they are still selective and carefully supervised.

    Sources list:
    National Institute on Aging โ€” https://www.nia.nih.gov/health/osteoporosis/osteoporosis
    NIAMS โ€” https://www.niams.nih.gov/health-topics/osteoporosis/diagnosis-treatment-and-steps-to-take
    Endocrine Society โ€” https://www.endocrine.org/clinical-practice-guidelines/osteoporosis-in-postmenopausal-women
    FDA teriparatide label โ€” https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2024/218771s000lbl.pdf
    University of Tokyo School of Science โ€” https://www.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/press/8480/
    Wikimedia Commons image page โ€” https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Osteoporosis_02.png

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #boneBuilding #boneDensity #boneHealth #fractureRisk #medicalInnovation #news #osteoporosis #osteoporosisResearch #osteoporosisTreatment #regenerativeMedicine #womenSHealth
    Kailash IVF Marks One Year of Delivering Advanced, Personalized Fertility Care โ€“ Tycoon World

    Noida, 11th April 2026: Kailash IVF, the fertility centre under Kailash Healthcare, has completed a successful year of providing advanced, ethical, and

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    New Machines for Medicine: AI Crafts Drug Candidates

    AI diffusion models created new drug candidates in 2025, speeding up medicine creation. This helps patients get new treatments sooner.

    #AIDrugDiscovery, #FutureOfMedicine, #DrugDevelopment, #AIinHealthcare, #MedicalInnovation

    https://newsletter.tf/ai-designs-new-drug-molecules-faster-2025/

    AI created new drug molecules in 2025, a process that used to take many years. This means new medicines could reach patients much faster.

    #AIDrugDiscovery, #FutureOfMedicine, #DrugDevelopment, #AIinHealthcare, #MedicalInnovation
    https://newsletter.tf/ai-designs-new-drug-molecules-faster-2025/

    AI Designs New Drug Molecules Faster in 2025

    AI diffusion models created new drug candidates in 2025, speeding up medicine creation. This helps patients get new treatments sooner.

    NewsletterTF

    Engineered Microbes Offer New Angle on Tumor Eradication

    Researchers at the University of Waterloo have engineered bacteria to find and eat tumors. This new method could offer a less harmful cancer treatment.

    #CancerResearch, #MedicalInnovation, #UniversityOfWaterloo, #TumorEradication, #Biotechnology

    https://newsletter.tf/engineered-bacteria-target-tumors-cancer-treatment/

    Scientists have created special bacteria that can find and eat cancer tumors. This is a new way to fight cancer that could be safer than current treatments.

    #CancerResearch, #MedicalInnovation, #UniversityOfWaterloo, #TumorEradication, #Biotechnology
    https://newsletter.tf/engineered-bacteria-target-tumors-cancer-treatment/

    Engineered Bacteria Target Tumors in New Cancer Treatment Research

    Researchers at the University of Waterloo have engineered bacteria to find and eat tumors. This new method could offer a less harmful cancer treatment.

    NewsletterTF