01 · The Goal

Rebuild the muscle and strength that aging strips away

The goal is to rebuild the muscle and strength that aging strips away — to reverse the slow wasting called sarcopenia — so older people keep the strength to stand, walk, and live independently.

02 · Why It Matters

Starting in midlife, the body slowly loses muscle — a process called sarcopenia. It is quiet but devastating: weakness, falls, frailty, and the loss of independence are among the largest drivers of decline in aging. Muscle is rebuildable tissue, which makes this loss a target rather than a destiny. Restoring age-lost muscle keeps people strong and self-reliant for far longer. It is the aging-focused companion to muscle regeneration.

03 · What We’re Trying to Achieve

We are building the capability to rebuild muscle lost to aging: reactivating the muscle’s own repair cells even when they have slowed with age, recharging the cellular engines that power muscle, and restoring the nerve-muscle signaling that drives strength.

04 · How It Works

Rebuilding what aging takes

Reactivating muscle repair Demonstrated — clinical foundations

Progressive strength training and protein/nutrition reliably rebuild muscle and strength even in older adults — the proven, foundational way to restore age-lost muscle by waking the muscle’s repair response.

Recharging mitochondria Clinical

Restoring muscle mitochondria — the cellular power plants that fade with age — brings back energy and endurance.

Targeting the biology of aging muscle Frontier

Therapies aimed at the molecular drivers of sarcopenia (including muscle-growth pathways) are in trials, seeking to rebuild muscle beyond what exercise alone achieves.

Restoring nerve-muscle signaling Frontier

Rebuilding the neuromuscular junction, which weakens with age, is needed for full functional strength.

05 · Who’s Building It

Cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers.

Universities & institutes

Academic muscle-biology, geriatric-medicine, and exercise-science research centers studying sarcopenia and muscle restoration.

Government & programs

National Institute on Aging (NIA, NIH) · National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases · NIH aging- and muscle-research programs.

Enabling science base

resistance-exercise & nutrition science · satellite (muscle stem) cells · sarcopenia biology · mitochondrial science · neuromuscular-junction research.

06 · Technologies

The technologies: progressive resistance exercise and nutrition (the proven foundation); satellite-cell activation; mitochondrial restoration; muscle-growth-pathway therapies in trials; and neuromuscular repair — together aiming to rebuild functional, powered strength, not just bulk.

07 · Breakthroughs

Exercise rebuilds muscle in older adults Demonstrated — clinical

Progressive resistance training and adequate protein rebuild muscle and strength even in advanced age — well-established, foundational evidence.

Mitochondrial restoration Clinical

Restoring muscle mitochondria improves energy and endurance in research and early human work.

Muscle-pathway therapies in trials Frontier

Drugs targeting muscle-growth pathways for sarcopenia are in clinical trials, with full reversal not yet established.

Neuromuscular repair Frontier

Rebuilding the nerve-muscle connection is an active research focus.

08 · Remaining Challenges

The honest challenges: fully reversing age-related muscle loss with therapies beyond exercise is not yet established — drug approaches are in trials, not proven. Aged repair cells are harder to reactivate. And regrown muscle must be nerve-driven and powered to restore real strength. What is proven and clinical: exercise-and-nutrition restoration. What is frontier: drug-based reversal. We keep that distinction clear.

09 · Mature Capability

The future, fully built

An older person watching their strength fade has muscle rebuilt: the muscle’s repair response reactivated through proven training and emerging therapies, mitochondria recharged, the nerve-muscle link restored — strength and independence kept far longer. Muscle loss becomes something we reverse, not accept.

Honest boundary: each item is tagged for where it stands — demonstrated, clinical, or frontier. The science is real, funded, and accelerating. AI supports human clinicians; it never replaces them.
10 · Evidence Vault

The proof, for this capability

Cited as evidence the capability is real, not as partners or endorsers.

Exercise & nutrition muscle restoration

Progressive resistance training and adequate protein rebuild muscle and strength even in advanced age. Stage: Demonstrated (clinical foundation).

Mitochondrial restoration

Restoring muscle mitochondria improves energy and endurance. Stage: Clinical.

Sarcopenia drug trials

Therapies targeting muscle-growth pathways are in clinical trials; full reversal not yet established. Stage: Frontier.

Honest framing

Real organizations and studies are cited as evidence the capability is real — not as partners or endorsers. Drug-based reversal of age-related muscle loss is not yet established; we do not claim it is.

Help build this future

Every signature grows the movement to make age-related muscle restoration real — and free at the point of need.

Paid for by Michael Floyd for President.

Scroll to Top