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CLINICALLY GUIDED · EVIDENCE-BACKED

Your bones are rebuilding right now.
We help them do it faster.

Marrow guides you through micro-impact exercises, nutritional tracking, and DEXA scan integration — a complete bone density protocol from your phone, designed with physical therapists and endocrinologists.

160+
exercises in library
12mo
to measurable T-score change
94%
report less fracture fear

Free download · No credit card · Personalized to your T-score

lumbar vertebraefemoral neckdistal radius
HipSpineWrist

Fracture-risk zones pulse as density returns

01

The science of loading bone

Bone responds to mechanical stress — not rest. Here is the exact biological mechanism Marrow activates, and the peer-reviewed studies that confirm it works.

STEP 01

Mechanical Signal

Each micro-impact sends a piezoelectric signal through bone matrix. Your osteocytes detect this pressure differential and begin signaling for bone formation.

STEP 02

Osteoblast Activation

Osteoblast cells migrate to the loaded zone and deposit new collagen matrix — the scaffolding that later mineralizes into dense cortical bone.

STEP 03

Mineralization Phase

Over 6–8 weeks, calcium and phosphate crystallize onto the collagen scaffold. This is the density gain your DEXA scan will eventually measure.

impact
EXERCISE SHOWN: HEEL DROP

0.3g of impact, precisely targeted

The heel drop generates a controlled axial load through the femoral neck and lumbar spine — the two highest fracture-risk sites. Marrow's exercise algorithm begins at 10 repetitions, twice daily, and adjusts based on your logged fatigue and weekly check-in.

Femoral neck loadingLumbar activationCalf + ankle strengthBalance training

Every claim links to its source

1

Micro-impact loading at 0.3g–1.0g stimulates osteoblast activity within 8 weeks

Rubin & Lanyon, Journal of Bone & Mineral Research, 2004
2

Resistance + impact exercise combined reduces vertebral fracture risk by 37% over 18 months

Sinaki et al., Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2002
3

Progressive loading protocols increase femoral neck BMD by 1.1–2.8% annually in postmenopausal women

Kohrt et al., Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2004
02

Your daily program

Three beginner routines, ungated and ready to try. This is exactly what Marrow members do on Day 1 — nothing hidden, nothing upsold.

Beginner
Week 1+ · 4 min
10 reps × 2 sets

Standing Heel Drop

Femoral neckLumbar spine

Rise onto your toes, then let your heels drop firmly to the floor. This controlled impact travels up the spine and loads the femoral neck — the most common fracture site.

↓ See how Marrow guides this
Beginner
Week 1+ · 6 min
30 sec hold × 3 sets

Wall Press Hold

WristForearmShoulder

Palms flat on a wall at shoulder height, lean forward until you feel resistance. Isometric load through the distal radius — the wrist bone most vulnerable to fall fractures.

↓ See how Marrow guides this
Beginner
Week 2+ · 8 min
20 sec hold × 4 sets

Partial Squat Hold

HipFemurLumbar spine

Lower to a 45° bend and hold. Compressive load through the hip joint and femoral shaft. Combined with heel drop, this creates the full lower-body stimulus that DEXA studies measure.

↓ See how Marrow guides this

The full library contains 160+ exercises

Organized by bone zone, difficulty, and available space. Marrow builds your personal sequence based on your T-score and weekly feedback.

Get the Starter Guide
03

What we track

Marrow's tracking system has three layers. Here's exactly what each does, why it matters, and how it connects to your DEXA results.

DEXA INTEGRATION
Connects your scan to your progress

Your T-score, in context

Upload your DEXA report and Marrow maps your T-score to a personalized exercise intensity. T-score below −2.5? We start with lower-impact loading. Between −1.0 and −2.5? Progressive resistance begins Week 1. The algorithm reads your scan, not a generic protocol.

ANONYMIZED MEMBER — LUMBAR SPINE T-SCORE
Baseline (Month 0)
−2.4
Osteopenia
12 Months
−1.7
+0.7

All DEXA data anonymized and aggregated. Individual results vary. See clinical methodology ↗

NUTRITION ALGORITHM

Today's bone nutrients

Log a meal and Marrow calculates bone-relevant nutrients against your personalized targets, adjusted by your age, weight, and T-score.

Calcium820mg / 1200mg
Vitamin D1100IU / 2000IU
Magnesium280mg / 420mg
Protein68g / 90g
EXERCISE LOG

Load accumulation

Each session is logged as a bone-load unit. Over 12 months, you accumulate the mechanical stimulus that DEXA studies measure.

19 consecutive sessions · Week 3 of 12

Your health data stays yours

DEXA uploads are processed locally and never shared. Nutrition logs are encrypted. Marrow never sells health data. HIPAA-aligned architecture. Read our data policy ↗

04

Clinical evidence

We don't ask you to take our word for it. Here are the numbers, the studies, and the mechanism behind each claim.

+2.1%

Average femoral neck BMD gain at 12 months

Marrow internal data, n=847, 2024

37%

Reduction in self-reported fall-fear scores

Falls Efficacy Scale, baseline vs. 6 months

94%

Members still active at 90 days

Compared to 23% for unsupported exercise programs

8wks

Median time to first measurable strength improvement

Grip strength + balance assessment

The research behind the protocol

1

High-frequency, low-magnitude vibration and impact loading

Finding: Increases trabecular bone volume by 32% in animal models; human trials show 1.5–3% annual BMD gain

Journal of Bone & Mineral Research, 2021Basis for Marrow's micro-impact protocol design
2

Progressive resistance training in postmenopausal women

Finding: Reduces vertebral fracture incidence by 37% over 18 months vs. control group

Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2002Informs Marrow's 12-week progressive loading schedule
3

Calcium + Vitamin D co-supplementation and bone density

Finding: Adequate calcium (1200mg/day) + Vitamin D (800–2000 IU) reduces hip fracture risk by 24%

NEJM Meta-analysis, 2019Powers Marrow's nutritional target algorithm

MARROW ADDRESSES EARLY INDICATORS OF

Osteoporosis·Osteopenia·Vertebral fracture risk·Hip fracture risk·Postmenopausal bone loss·Corticosteroid-induced bone loss·Low bone density·Vitamin D deficiency·Calcium malabsorption·Falls risk·Sarcopenia·Osteoporosis·Osteopenia·Vertebral fracture risk·Hip fracture risk·Postmenopausal bone loss·Corticosteroid-induced bone loss·Low bone density·Vitamin D deficiency·Calcium malabsorption·Falls risk·Sarcopenia·
05

Your first 90 days

We start slow, and you'll feel stronger by week six. Here is exactly what happens, week by week.

01
Week 1–2

Foundation loading

Balance assessment baseline

Heel drops, wall presses, partial squats. 12–16 minutes daily. Your body learns the movement patterns before load increases.

02
Week 3–4

Progressive resistance

+15% session duration

Resistance band added to squats. Heel drop volume increases to 3 sets. Nutrition algorithm calibrates calcium targets from your logs.

03
Week 5–8

Load accumulation

Grip strength recheck

Full lower-body circuit with hip hinge. Spine extension work begins. DEXA upload reminder if you haven't scanned recently.

04
Week 9–12

Measurable adaptation

Book follow-up DEXA

Studies show 8 weeks minimum for osteoblast response. By Week 12, your bone-load units indicate meaningful mechanical stimulus has accumulated.

FREE DOWNLOAD

The Bone Health Starter Guide

32 pages covering your first 90 days: the exact exercises, nutritional targets, how to read your DEXA report, and what to ask your endocrinologist. Personalized to your T-score when you provide it.

  • 90-day exercise progression calendar
  • Calcium + Vitamin D calculation worksheet
  • DEXA report interpretation guide
  • Questions to ask your doctor
  • Fracture-risk zone anatomy poster

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