A team of engineers and pharmacologists from Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore and Al-Ameen college of Pharmacy, Bangalore, has come up with the modified Zoledronic acid (ZOL) drug, which has proved to be effective in treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis.
What makes this novel mode of treatment even more special is the use of extremely small particles, called nanoparticles, for drug delivery, says a release by Gubbi Labs.
About nine million bone fractures occur each year due to osteoporosis, a progressive bone disease in which bone loses both its mass and density, thereby becoming weaker. Current treatment regimes involve restricting further bone damage, but not restoring previous strength.
"We have designed a new formulation, where the ZOL is first adsorbed on nanoparticles of hydroxyapatite and carried to osteoporotic bone by intravenous injection", said lead author Deepak Kumar Khajuria.
"We are able to demonstrate successfully that this formulation not only prevents further bone loss, but also stimulates bone growth", he added.
The team used 12-week-old female rats, whose ovaries were removed so that bone remodelling would not occur. Various doses of Hydroxylapatite (HA, which can be found in teeth and bones within the human body), ZOL and a combination of both were tested on the rats.