Scientific illustration depicting parathyroid hormone strengthening mouse vertebral endplates to repel pain nerves, reducing chronic low back pain in spinal degeneration models.
Scientific illustration depicting parathyroid hormone strengthening mouse vertebral endplates to repel pain nerves, reducing chronic low back pain in spinal degeneration models.
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Study links parathyroid hormone to reduced chronic low back pain in mice by limiting abnormal nerve growth

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A study published in the journal *Bone Research* reports that parathyroid hormone (PTH) reduced pain-related behaviors in mouse models of spinal degeneration, apparently by strengthening vertebral endplates and triggering bone-cell signals that repel pain-sensing nerve fibers. The work was led by Dr. Janet L. Crane of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Low back pain (LBP) is among the most widespread health problems globally, and in many cases clinicians cannot identify a clear structural cause—making long-term treatment difficult.

A study published in Volume 14 of Bone Research describes an experimental approach in mice that targets biological changes seen during spinal degeneration, rather than aiming only to blunt symptoms. The research team tested parathyroid hormone (PTH)—a hormone involved in calcium regulation and bone remodeling, with synthetic forms already used to treat osteoporosis—in three mouse models meant to mirror common drivers of spinal degeneration: aging, surgically induced mechanical instability, and genetic susceptibility.

Across treatment windows ranging from two weeks to two months, mice received daily injections of PTH while control animals received an inactive solution. In the models assessed after one to two months of treatment, the study reports that PTH was associated with denser, more stable vertebral endplates—thin layers that separate spinal discs from vertebrae—and with reduced sensitivity in tests linked to pain behaviors, including responses to pressure and heat. The researchers also reported increased activity in treated animals.

Tissue analysis focused on abnormal growth of sensory nerve fibers into damaged spinal regions. The study says PTH treatment reduced these aberrant nerve fibers based on the markers PGP9.5 and CGRP.

To explain how a bone-directed hormone might alter pain signaling, the researchers identified a pathway in which PTH stimulates osteoblasts (bone-forming cells) to produce Slit3, a guidance protein that can repel nerve growth. Laboratory experiments described in the report found that Slit3 directly limited nerve outgrowth. The study further reports that when Slit3 was removed from osteoblasts in mice, PTH no longer reduced nerve growth or improved pain-related measures, and it identified the regulatory protein FoxA2 as part of the mechanism that activates Slit3 production in response to PTH.

"During spinal degeneration, pain-sensing nerves grow into regions where they normally do not exist. Our findings show that parathyroid hormone can reverse this process by activating natural signals that push these nerves away," Crane said.

The researchers cautioned that the findings come from animal studies and said further work in humans would be required before any clinical use for back pain. "Our study suggests that PTH treatment of LBP during spinal degeneration may reduce aberrant innervation, laying the foundation for future clinical trials exploring the efficacy of PTH as a disease-modifying and pain-relief treatment for spinal degeneration," Crane said.

The ScienceDaily summary of the study said the research was supported by the U.S. National Institute on Aging under an NIH award and subproject listed in the release.

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Limited discussions on X positively highlight a mouse study in Bone Research showing parathyroid hormone (PTH) reduces chronic low back pain by strengthening vertebral endplates and repelling pain-sensing nerves, with the journal account suggesting repurposing osteoporosis drugs and users sharing the ScienceDaily article.

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Illustration depicting FGF21 hormone activating hindbrain circuit in obese mouse to drive weight loss via boosted metabolism, highlighting NTS, AP, and PBN.
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Researchers map hindbrain circuit through which hormone FGF21 drives weight loss in obese mice

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University of Oklahoma scientists report that the hormone FGF21 reduces body weight in obese mice by acting on a hindbrain pathway—centered on the nucleus of the solitary tract and area postrema—that relays signals to the parabrachial nucleus. The team says the mechanism overlaps anatomically with brain regions implicated in GLP-1 drugs, but appears to promote weight loss mainly by increasing metabolic rate rather than primarily suppressing food intake.

Researchers are revisiting substance P, a neuropeptide linked to migraine pain, after it was dismissed as a treatment target 25 years ago. A recent study shows it causes headaches and blood vessel dilation in both migraine sufferers and others, suggesting potential for new therapies. This comes amid advances in blocking other migraine-related peptides like CGRP and PACAP.

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Researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder have pinpointed a brain region called the caudal granular insular cortex, or CGIC, that acts as a switch turning acute pain into chronic pain. In animal studies, disabling this circuit prevented chronic pain from developing or reversed it once established. The findings, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, open paths to new treatments beyond opioids.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, have discovered a mechanism by which exercise helps protect the brain from age-related damage associated with Alzheimer's disease. Physical activity prompts the liver to release an enzyme that repairs the blood-brain barrier, reducing inflammation and improving memory in older mice. The findings, published in the journal Cell, highlight a body-to-brain pathway that could lead to new therapies.

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Promising animal studies from University of Colorado Boulder offer hope for osteoarthritis patients through a single injection that repairs damaged joints in weeks. Affecting one in six people over 30—with no cure—the disease limits daily activities, but this therapy targets root causes beyond pain management or surgery.

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