This is just epic news. Well done all the scientists for making this happen. :)
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I want this so bad, I have lost all cartilage in my wrists and I don't want to get them fused.
I couldn't imagine how shitty that must be, I really hope this advancement does help you regrow yours so you don't have to get them fused.
Probably worth adding "in mice" to the title
Mice are really living in a golden age. They have never been so healthy.
The only downside is the never ending genocide at the hands of scientists
Is it still genocide if the ones killing are also reproducing them?
It's kinda worse. Imagine if aliens came here and not just killed us all, but bred us only to be experimented on and then horribly dying with less than 1% living a bit longer and maybe experience some odd things the others didn't. Like a factory where the first machine is making us have children before we get killed then doing the same for our kids ad infinitum.5
Now we only need a drug to turn humans into mice and back.
Cindarellazine.
And human tissues, and it's been shown to be safe in phase I trials.
So saying "in mice" undersells where they are at.
I would like to order one new left knee cartilage please!
Just take some from someone. Jeez, the learned helplessness of some people...
This and then the new about regrowing teeth. Its a very exciting time in medicine.
Good. Biological aging is nothing more than a series of processes, not an inherent property of atoms, and it's time we start getting serious about anti-aging and life extension.
But probably not, seeing what the world is like.
Its mostly billionaires who will be able to benefit from life extension... do you really want a world where trump, musk, and all their silicon valley friends rule the world until they turn 300 years old?
Luckily there's no vaccine against guillotines.
Give it time.

Aroooooo
Ready for someone to tell me why this unfortunately won't work / become mainstream
Well, this same drug (working name MF-300) is a PDGH-15 inhibitor and has already been through phase 1 human trials for a separate condition.
Because PDGH-15 also causes age related muscle weakness.
Now, PDGH-15 also plays a role in cancer prevention, and there may be a few other less obvious functions.
I don't know if the results of the phase 1 trials have been published yet, but it's been a while since I checked.
I've been hearing about MF-300 for a little under a year, and with these same claims about restoring cartilage.
Good news.
Statically, I'll probably need this type of therapy within the next 10-15 years. I hope it's ready for general clinical use by then.
Americans, we get it, you have no healthcare system worth the name. Stop assuming nobody else worldwide can get the meds either.
Exactly. Functional public health systems will assess patient outcomes and the expenditure in money and resources to determine what treatments get approved.
The odds are pretty good that - if this works out - this will be on the list of approved treatments straight away. Surgery is an expensive and high-load pathway for public health systems. A non-surgical treatment that gives good outcomes is such a win-win for both patients and public health systems that it almost doesn't matter how much it costs.
i have femoral head necrosis, though so technically not arthritis but that is absolutely great news for everything else
Wow, this is really exciting. I guess it’ll take years more research before we’ll know if this can benefit humans, but if they can replicate the results with humans then it could potentially prevent chronic pain and mobility issues in millions of people.
Hopefully not just humans. Many dogs for example suffer from the very same issues when they get older.
