More on the problems with HGH and Sports

October 9th, 2008

Finally, someone is coming clean. I just read the article that Ron Hornaday acknowledged using testosterone cream in periods from 2004 to ‘06 but sometimes it’s not what you think. I mean it seems like he had a legitimate reason but hiding it under his wife’s name seems kind of sketchy. Take a read for yourself and tell me what you think courtesy of the Boston Globe:

NASCAR approved the 50-year-old Hornaday, driver of the No. 33 Chevrolet, to compete in today’s Camping World RV Rental 200 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

“It’s over and done with,” said Jim Hunter, NASCAR’s vice president of corporate communications. “He’s cleared to race. We don’t see where Ron did anything wrong.”

According to ESPN The Magazine, Hornaday received the cream from the Palm Beach Rejuvenation Center, the same facility that supplied human growth hormone to Patriots safety Rodney Harrison and Red Sox pitcher Paul Byrd when he was with Cleveland.

ESPN reported that the Palm Beach Rejuvenation Center, also sent shipments of HGH to Lindy Hornaday, the driver’s wife. Kevin Harvick, owner of Hornaday’s truck, shot down any talk about HGH.

“We’re not dragging Lindy Hornaday into this,” said Harvick. “We’ve already violated enough personal records. These are personal health issues. Ron was kind enough to show NASCAR and us his personal health issues. On the HGH side, we’re not getting into that.”

Hornaday said he started to feel ill in December 2004, with weight loss and fatigue being two primary complaints. Hornaday was referred to the Palm Beach Rejuvenation Center by a friend, and after tests and consultations, he was prescribed the cream. According to ESPN, Hornaday used the cream daily for 13 months.

“We’ve got all the paperwork, bloodwork, everything he went through to get the cream,” said Harvick. “The diagnosis of why it was prescribed and why all the stuff came to him. There are a lot of different health issues you use steroids for.”

In 2005, Hornaday continued to lose weight and underwent an emergency appendectomy in April. That year, another doctor diagnosed Hornaday with gastrolitis.

But Hornaday still lost weight. In February 2006, after Hornaday competed in the Racetickets.com 200 at California Speedway (he required an IV before the race), Harvick scheduled another doctor’s appointment for his driver at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C., where he was diagnosed with a hyperactive thyroid. Hornaday has been taking a medication called Synthroid to treat the condition. He was informed that he could have died if not for the Graves’ disease diagnosis.

Hunter said NASCAR will issue a revised substance-abuse policy in several weeks.

Costs of HGH - Could it be cheaper soon

October 8th, 2008

Just found some info one the possibility of hgh getting cheaper soon. Right now it seems like its for the Europeans but hopefully soon we’ll have it over in our side of town. Check out the article below. Somewhat more of a press release but all in all worth a read.

With the approval of biosimilars in Europe, the overall cost of human growth hormone (hGH) treatment has reduced by more than 25 per cent. Manufacturers are now more likely to take initiatives to obtain marketing approval from EMEA for other indications and to increase research in alternative drug delivery methods to combat pricing pressures from biosimilars. The success of these initiatives will be crucial for growth in the European hGH market.

The European Human Growth Hormone Market, finds that the market generated revenues of $846.4 million in 2007 and is estimated to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.4 per cent for the period 2007-2014. “Currently, hGH treatment is approved for only five medical conditions in Europe,” notes Frost & Sullivan Research Analyst Prabakar Sampath. “Further growth of the European hGH market depends on the EMEA’s approval of hGH treatment for new indications such as cachexia and achondroplasia.”
While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved hGH treatment for several conditions including cachexia, EMEA demands strict scientific evidence for the efficacy of hGH in these conditions referenced here at http://sleptfoolishfree.info. Even though research is underway to prove the efficacy of somatropin in several other indications, manufacturers are reluctant to file for marketing approval ever since the EMEA declined approval for Serostim, Merck-Serono’s hGH product for AIDS-related wasting.
The biochemical nature of hGH shows that the treatment is more effective when the protein is injected into the blood stream using a hypodermic needle. Therefore, developing alternative drug delivery methods is one of the most important challenges for manufacturers.
“One of the chief competitive factors for hGH products is the delivery method, which represents an avenue for product differentiation,” remarks Sampath. “Alternative drug delivery methods could increase the market size by attracting more users, particularly considering that the majority of hGH users are children below the age of fifteen and that hGH injections have to be given daily.”
Manufacturers need to form strategic partnerships with drug delivery design companies to facilitate somatropin delivery through oral and transdermal means. Such products would be a blessing for needle-apprehensive children and adults who need to be injected every day.

Newcomer into HGH industry

October 5th, 2008

Wow, it’s been awhile since i’ve really updated the site but i just read something really interesting about a new company entering in the hgh arena with a synthetic version of somatropin. Check out the press release below:

Critical Pharmaceuticals,the Nottingham, UK-based speciality pharmaceuticals company, today announcedthat the successful completion of preclinical trials of a sustained releaseformulation of the synthetic human growth hormone (hGH) somatropin. Trialsdemonstrated therapeutic plasma concentrations were achieved over an extendedperiod of time supporting the development of the product as a once every twoweekly injection. In addition, the efficacy profile using biomarkers wascomparable to current daily formulations. The new formulation was produced using Critical’s patented CriticalMixdelivery technology, which is based on world leading supercritical fluidexpertise. This enables the optimal encapsulation of drugs into injectablemicroparticles with superior drug release properties. hGH delivery is anatural application for this technology, and the company now intends to takethis product forward into Phase 1 clinical trials. This decision coincideswith a recent report by Frost & Sullivan valuing the European market at$846.4m in 2007, with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.4 per centfrom 2007 to 2014. The report also highlighted new delivery methods togetherwith approval for new indications as keys to success.

According to Chief Business Officer Gareth King, these preclinicalresults mark an important milestone for the company: “Over the past fewyears, we have concentrated on optimizing our delivery technologies andensuring they are transferable from the lab into an industrial setting.Sustained release hGH is one of three projects we are now developing in areasof unmet need. There is no doubt that a sustained release version of hGHwould be preferred by patients, particularly paediatric, but there arenaturally concerns over safety and efficacy. We are confident the highlycontrolled release rates achieved with our technology will overcome theseconcerns. The plan is now to take this product into clinic either byourselves or in partnership. We are also in preclinical development withsustained release Risperidone and, demonstrating the versatility of ourtechnology platform, a once-daily nasal formulation of hGH.”

Great Read - Does HGH really work?

March 29th, 2008

Just found this floating over the net, courtesy of Scott Thill, it’s a good read and definately a eye-opener. Tell me what you think about the article. I’m looking for the original source to link to, once i find it i’ll post it.
“In an earlier report on human growth hormone (HGH), known simply as growth hormone in scientific circles, I took athletes like Roger Clemens to task for lying about taking it to increase their field performance. It’s an obsolete tactic to employ, especially during a period in which superstars like Sylvester Stallone not only take it to bulk up for films like his latest Rambo roid rage-fest, but also advise anyone within range that they should hop on its juice as well. Sure, Clemens was on the line for perjury, dragged as he was in front of Congress on the matter, but, as hoops stars say all the time, the ball don’t lie. And Clemens’s stats in his declining years in baseball don’t tell the story of an aging great whose body can’t hold up against the strain: They tell the tale of someone who, against entropy and all common sense, managed to stave off the aging process long enough to pick up a couple World Series wins, Cy Young awards and hundreds of millions.

But that would only be part of the tale. The rest of it isn’t as exciting as the Mitchell Report, or watching baseball titans like Clemens and Mark McGwire humbly schlep to Washington for some long-deserved scrutiny on their garish records and paydays. That’s because the rest of the tale is about the science, rather than the hype, of HGH.

And like the ball before it, the science don’t lie.

Let’s get unequivocal: HGH is highly capable of increasing lean muscle mass, overall metabolism, calcium retention, skin elasticity, bone mineralization, protein synthesis and even homeostasis, which is to say, some of the most important aspects of physical development. It can also significantly decrease fat mass, which, these days, is almost as important a psychological development as a physical one. Bodybuilders are entranced by its ability to turn them into behemoths, and pro athletes love the way it has proven to help them recover from their injuries. But it doesn’t stop there: According to acolytes, it can even increase the sex drive, offer better REM sleep and stimulate the immune system. Its benefits, such as they, are nevertheless socially legitimized by its meteoric rise, as around 300,000 weekend warriors, pro athletes and Average Janes and Joes spend an estimated $2 billion on it annually, in the process increasing the stock of companies like Pfizer, Genentech, Merck, Lilly and onward, who sell synthetic versions of the naturally occurring hormone over the counter.

But, as a Stanford University study released in March 2008 explained, that doesn’t mean that taking HGH will in any way make you an athlete as capable as Clemens, or even Stallone. Which makes sense: Just because you’re huge doesn’t mean you can actually hit a 90 mph fastball or tackle Tom Brady. As scientists continually take pains to remind us, everything depends on the details, and those vary by person. What the science does know, however, is that extended use can have adverse effects, from diabetes and joint inflammation to high blood pressure, heart failure and perhaps cancer.

“What we found suggested that it didn’t help, and at some point, it might hurt,” the study’s lead investigator Hau Liu told the San Jose Mercury News shortly after it was published in Monday’s issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine. “In addition,” Liu explained in the study’s conclusion, “growth hormone in the healthy young is frequently associated with adverse events.”

But even Liu admits there are too many caveats in the Stanford study for it to be a convincing case, something that seems to occur with regularity when it comes to the scientific community and growth hormone. For one, the study analyzed smaller doses than those taken by professional athletes, and it considered only HGH alone, rather than its efficacy in muscle cocktails making the rounds of stadiums, locker rooms and gyms near you. Those cocktails include everything from insulin to anabolic steroids to other hormones and beyond, which, when mixed together, can achieve a cumulative result unattainable by reliance upon one substance.

Claims regarding the performance-enhancing properties of growth hormone are premature and are not supported by our review of the literature,” Liu wrote in the study’s conclusion. But “more research, including an identification and evaluation of real world growth hormone doping protocols, is warranted to definitively determine the effects of growth hormone on athletic performance.”

In other words, it could be bad for you or it could be good for you, depending on who you are. That unconvincing thesis, repeated across the planet by authorities accepted and otherwise, has only fueled HGH’s rise. If you thought there were a lot of baseball players on it, wait until the National Football League gets serious about its use among its own. But it never will, because those enhanced athletes in turn enhance the sport’s bottom line. In fact, almost all of the 89 players fingered in the Mitchell Report for HGH use are so valuable to their teams that Major League Baseball is giving up on suspending most, if not all, of them. That is a lot of hard statistical and financial evidence to ignore. And it’s just one sport.

That’s just the athletes: Ordinary people are juicing up and shelling out good money for fast results. According to Sen. Charles Schumer, who introduced a proposal in December 2007 to make HGH a controlled substance, around 10 percent of high schoolers are experimenting with it, and its use among the adult population is growing. Even police departments have begun to seriously consider testing their officers for performance-enhancing drugs, yet are running into problems because the cost to test for steroids is higher than those that test for substances like cannabis or cocaine. Meanwhile, the culture at large, awash in the unrestrained militarism of the War on Terror or the brutal spectacle of mixed martial-arts bloodsports like the Ultimate Fighting Championship, is more muscular than ever before. And social permissiveness of proactive aggression, regardless of the tabloid time-outs in Washington, has reached critical mass: Nike’s “Just Do It” slogan, a clarion call for ’90s pop culture, has been replaced by one designed too perfectly by President Bush for the rougher, tougher, dumber ’00s: “Bring It On.”

Further, studies for HGH will never be definitive until some convincing human trials, otherwise known as tests to see who can’t die first, are launched, and that could never happen. And it shouldn’t, as a major question has yet to be entertained by either side of the HGH divide: Who has the right to tell Americans what they can and cannot put in their bodies? And if that’s the Drug Enforcement Administration, or the American Medical Association, then it’s fair to ask how consistent they are in pursuit of the public good. After all, caffeine, nicotine and alcohol, which are used by a much higher statistical slice of the populace and are astronomically dangerous compared to HGH (and even cannabis), are perfectly legal substances. All of which begs the subsequent questions: At which point does a standard become a double standard?

Whatever the answer is, one thing is for sure: HGH is here to stay. If it’s all in your mind, as some scientists and talking heads have been proclaiming lately, that doesn’t mean it’s not working. If consumers take something that makes them think they’re going to get bigger faster, most will work harder to achieve those results. And if it’s not in their heads, they’re going to see results there as well. And results, whether in the form of World Series wins, millions of butts in the seats, or just diamond-cut abs, are everything.

In the end, one is left with the usual noncommittal conclusion these types of social conflicts create, where personal morality crashes headlong into political responsibility and leaves only wreckage and theory. Such indecision has left a wide-open hole in the culture, and drugs of all types, not just HGH, have leapt in to fill the void that humanity sometimes sees when it looks in the mirror. This is a process that has been going on for centuries, which is another way of saying it is going nowhere until either faction, the users and the critics, sit down and hash out the data.

Until they do, bring it on, baby. Bring it on.”

HGH UPDATED

February 24th, 2008

Ok Guys, so I’ve been away for the past year finishing up other projects but know i’m back. Back to what i wanted to get started last year but didn’t have time. To recap, I wanna get a real discussion on people experiences and thoughts on HGH. I’ll start tomorrow with a few discussions questions to see where people are at. Stay Tuned

Real or False

August 22nd, 2007

I grabbed this on the net a couple of minutes ago. I great read about the truths and falsities of HGH. Take a read!!!
HGH (human growth hormone) is one of the body’s natural hormones. It is produced by the Pituitary gland at the centre of the brain. HGH in turn stimulates other glands and processes around the body to work to maximum efficiency.

Recent studies have shown that raising the body’s levels of Human Growth Hormone can delay or even reverse biological aging.

As we exit our teen years our bodies produce increasingly less HGH. This leads to a host of unwanted side-effects including increased body fat, decreased immunity, poor skin tone, decreased libido, and the many other symptoms we usually associate with aging.

Experts once thought that an aging pituitary gland did not have the facility to produce greater amounts of HGH. However, more recent studies show that a maturing pituitary really is indeed capable of producing as much HGH as when it was much younger, but only when it is stimulated to do so.

In recent clinical tests, raised levels of HGH produced:

Average increased muscle (nearly 9% in six months with no exercise)

An average 14% fat-reduction after six months, (with no dieting)

Superior immune function

More rapid wound-healing

Much improved and deeper sleep

Sharper vision

Higher energy levels

Better sexual performance

Greater cardiac output

Increased exercise capacity

Improved kidney function

Blood pressure reduced

Improved cholesterol profile

Stronger bone structure

Younger, thicker skin

Reduced Hair-Loss, Hair re-growth

Wrinkle reduction

Reduction or Elimination of cellulite

Mood Improvements

Increased memory retention

A modest raising of HGH levels can be achieved by a few people just by exercise and giving serious attention to their diet, and by reducing their weight to a lower level. But for the rest of us, this is no solution.

Injections of pure HGH can be used to raise HGH levels but this is pretty expensive. To keep prices reasonable, most HGH supplements on the market contain very low levels of HGH, frequently too low to have a lasting effect. These products achieve their results by delivering mixtures of herbs and homeopathic remedies which naturally nudge the pituitary into greater performance.

The latest research suggests that the best way of increasing HGH levels is to get the body to produce more HGH. Other than introducing a large and expensive amount of pure HGH directly into the body, it is also possible to persuade a pituitary gland to produce more HGH on its own.

If a potential user accepts wants to raise his or her HGH levels and keep aging at bay, how can this be achieved? This usually comes down to things like the cost and/or convenience. If cost is not a factor, then HGH injections will usually be best, but the bother of those regular injections is off-putting to most.

The alternative for most ordinary folk is to go for one of the proprietary products available, all of which seek to re-stimulate the pituitary to produce at a higher level. Some do this with tablets, pills or capsules, others by direct into-the-mouth sprays. Some actually DO include small amounts of real HGH to enhance the effect, although regulatory restrictions mean that this is a very small amount indeed.

In another article I will discuss the pros and cons of each method of application. For now I will leave you with a heartfelt warning: BEWARE!

It is difficult to recognize a genuine HGH Product from a spurious one, just by looking. Sugar capsules can be designed to look precisely like the real thing, also sugar-water, and copying the packaging isn’t too difficult either. Always obtain your HGH (whatever the form) from a country with regulations that are rigidly enforced. At the head of such a list will be: USA , Canada, UK, European Community. Don’t take this to mean that all else is tarnished, far from it. But please be very careful!

Quick update on exactly what HGH is?

July 8th, 2007

FOR some, it is the promise of a youthful, ideal to perfect physical appearance that lures one to continuously search the elusive fountain of youth solution. For others, it is the feeling of wanting to be young again, of wanting to combat the concrete physical and hormonal signs of aging.

And because of this mindset, a long list of hormonal substances, antiaging lasers are being offered everywhere. Some are true, others just plain quackery without the benefit of research studies.

Augmentation of levels of depleted growth hormone is a well-documented treatment. HGH (human growth hormone) is the most abundant hormone secreted by the anterior pituitary gland. HGH peaks during the adolescent period, then rapidly decreases on the third and fourth decades of life. HGH is secreted immediately after entering into deep through pulsed secretions that explains why we feel re-energized long hours of restful sleep.

What exactly is a growth hormone?

HGH activates cell production, growth and metabolic processes within the human body. Working in conjunction with other hormones, it stimulates and regulates proper human growth and development. Initially approved by the FDA in 1985 for the treatment of shortness in height due to growth hormone (GH) deficiency and again approved in 1996 for HIV/AIDS related wasting (gaunt and thin patients). Growth hormones stimulate cell replication that helps rebuild and maintain body mass improving overall health. Some are used by athletes for performance enhancement to make them run faster, jump higher and hit stronger. It is also being used as an antiaging treatment by many physicians all over the world.

How can Human Growth Hormone help in antiaging?

Adults with HGH deficiency manifest the following: lack of vigor, emotional liability, feeling of social isolation, increased body weight and fat mass, decreased lean body mass, increased abdominal adiposity, decreased exercise capacity, decreased muscle mass and strength, decreased cardiac performance, reduced bone density and increase risk of fracture, loss of hair density, skin wrinkling, dryness, blurring of vision and loss of sexual desire.

HGH slowly restores vitality, vigor, youthfulness and longevity to its recipient. HGH is given for six months but its effects are felt and seen in 1 to 2 months time.

Great insight on HGH courtesy of the Times

July 8th, 2007

Great read!

Arriving at the fashion shoot, Lindsay Lohan was on the verge of collapse. Behind her outsize shades, the starlet appeared nervous and jumpy, and constantly complained of feeling ill. There were mutterings among her people: call a doctor – Lindsay needs a shot to “perk her up”. And, though the mysterious shot never materialised, it was clear that a private physician wielding a syringe was as much a part of her life as first-class air travel and a constant trail of paparazzi.

Lohan is not alone. At a comeback concert in Miami last month, Britney Spears reportedly demanded an “emergency” injection of vitamin B12 to revive her flagging energy levels before she went on stage. Asked about the incident afterwards, a spokesman for the singer shrugged. “I wouldn’t be surprised,” he said. It was as if Spears had just downed an espresso or a wheatgrass juice.

In the fast-living but insanely health-obsessed world of Hollywood, being injected with a “performance” shot – a cocktail of vitamins or hormones designed to put you back on form – is now as commonplace as having Botox. Geri Halliwell has used vitamin shots to see her through her diets. Robbie Williams has resorted to similar pick-me-up jabs to help him to recover from the twin rigours of touring and partying. Even in Britain, a quick shot is increasingly seen as an easy antidote to the tribulations of modern celebrity life. The artist Tracey Emin recently revealed that she has an occasional vitamin jab to keep her going. “Exhausted,” she wrote in her diary after a trip to Venice before the Biennale. “I went to have a vitamin B12 injection. Pity they only last two weeks.”

Such vitamin shots are nothing new – Margaret Thatcher is said to have had B12 injections to help her to survive on four hours’ sleep a night. But the number of civilians wanting them is rising exponentially. Heather Bird-Tchenguiz, wife of the property magnate Robert Tchenguiz and owner of HB Health anti-ageing clinics on both sides of the Atlantic, says she has seen a huge surge in the demand for injectable lifestyle vitamins. “People lead busy, tiring lives, and I believe there are benefits for those who use these performance injectables responsibly, under medical supervision. I have used vitamin and mineral injections myself. I have used a mixture of B complex, vitamin C and zinc to recover from illness or to help with tiredness. Injections can be very effective if you aren’t getting enough from oral supplements.”

Health is not the only reason people are demanding vitamin shots, however. The supermodel Cindy Crawford, now 41, recently admitted that her ageless looks were largely down to the skill of her cosmetic surgeon, Jean-Louis Sebagh. “I’m not going to lie to myself,” she said. “Past a certain age, creams work on the texture of your skin, but in order to restore elasticity, all I can really count on is vitamin injections, Botox and collagen.”

Plum Sykes, the author and New York society queen, also attributes her perfect skin to vitamin shots. She sees the hottest dermatologist in Manhattan, Steven Victor, who injects her skin with his vitamin C solution, which also includes traces of vitamins A, B and E and zinc and copper. Fergie, too, is said to be a devotee of the treatment. “I see him every four months or so,” Sykes says. “Your skin is pricked all over by these tiny needles, like acupuncture, which injects vitamin C just below the skin’s surface. It’s wonderful – and addictive!”

Addictive it may be, but the new shot culture isn’t without its dangers. A cursory search of the internet reveals injectable vitamins of every type for sale for DIY use, including the potentially dangerous vitamin A, which is implicated in an increased risk of cancer and birth defects. You can buy ultra-high-dose vitamin A, direct from Romania, for less than £10 for five phials.

Most British nutritionists throw up their hands in horror at the idea of people self-administering. “Vitamin injections are an extreme and dangerous fad,” says Claire MacEvilly, of the British Nutrition Foundation. “Overinjecting non-water-soluble vitamins A and D is easy and a real cause for concern. It can cause cramps, nosebleeds, nausea, blurred vision, dry skin, liver disease, weight loss, kidney stones and permanent kidney damage, irritability and jaundice. In the most extreme cases, it can lead to death.”

But vitamin therapies are just part of the lifestyle-injections story. The needle is increasingly seen as the answer to every conceivable modern ill. Flabby thighs? One jab of Lipostabil, and you’ll melt that fat away. Sex drive not what it used to be? Break out the testosterone and watch that lion roar. Though nobody in the medical world will talk about it openly, there’s a tacit understanding that almost anything is available to those who are prepared to pay. Rumours abound of doctors being asked to inject adrenaline – usually used to restart stopped hearts – or to slip a bit of something in with the vitamins to help a sluggish libido.

Even legal shots are entering realms that, only a few years ago, would have been seen as perilous ground. In America, there has been a huge rise in the use of human growth hormone (HGH) injections as an anti-ageing tool. A 2005 report estimated that 20,000 to 30,000 people in the USA were using HGH shots as an anti-ageing therapy, at a cost of up to $1,000 a month, even though such use is illegal in America. Anna Nicole Smith took the hormone regularly (the coroner who examined her body found that she had blood poisoning probably caused by an injection piercing an abscess on her bottom), and Sylvester Stallone was recently detained by Australian customs officials who found 48 phials of HGH stuffed in his luggage.

Bird-Tchenguiz has tried HGH in Britain, where its use is permitted, with, she says, good results. “I used HGH after I had had my appendix out and developed an abscess. I was thin and too weak to exercise. I had injections for a couple of months and saw the muscle mass increase. It also provided energy. I also used it to get my hormone levels back to normal after giving birth and a year of breast-feeding, when I wanted to conceive my next child, and once for a couple of weeks to lose weight before a holiday. It works.”

She admits, though, that some people are turning to such shots for the wrong reasons. “There are the health enthusiasts like myself, who want to go the route of prevention rather than cure,” she says. “If you want to run a Ferrari at peak performance, you have to provide the correct quality of petrol, oil, spark plugs and so on. But there are those who are in it because they do not want to change their lifestyle and are looking for a quick fix – often pill-poppers looking for something that gets more results. For a time, they enjoy the benefits – increased muscle mass, decrease in body fat, more energy, a body that performs as it did when it was younger. But if you ask a Ferrari to perform at peak performance without providing the right servicing, it will eventually burn out.”

Fountain of youth? Or just a Fade!!

June 6th, 2007

Interesting read:

Fighting back the effects of time on the body has never been so prevalent in human history than during the baby boomer era. This one generation, more than any other, refuses to let the ravages of time dictate to it and has been responsible for what can only been termed as an antiaging revolution.

From plastic surgery to nutrition based products, they’ll consider just about anything which promises to delay the aging process. So where does HGH treatment fit into the equation? It’s right up there with the best!

Antiaging HGH treatment is an option being pursued not just by people 40 and over, but surprisingly, by many in their 20’s and 30’s. Are there merits in HGH treatment? Research continues to throw up some interesting statistics for this antiaging treatment which are a little hard to ignore.

Human Growth Hormone is naturally produced by the body anyway so it’s hard to understand the naysayers detracting from it as an effective tool to combat aging. During a person’s youth, it is produced in plentiful quantities however, it’s levels gradually diminish over the course of a persons life and by the time they are in their sixties, it’s estimated to be at levels almost 80% below than when they are in their twenties.

Benefits Of Antiaging HGH Treatment

Used under strict medical supervision, HGH treatment has been shown tp promote good and lasting health contributing to the maintenance of strong bone density and solid energy levels. In essence, it’s designed to promote a better quality of life.

Antiaging treatments are everywhere today and in many cases, they are a little superficial. Surgery and skin products are one thing but laying the foundation for long lasting health begins within. HGH treatment has opened the door for further studies on delaying the aging process and for older people, if this can be accomplished with a substance natural to the human body, then maybe the answer has been staring us in the face all the time.

What Is Human Growth Hormone?

HGH is created or produced in what is known as the pituitary gland. It’s also known as Somatropin which in normal circumstances, is used to treat children with growth problems. However, it’s been proven to generate bone strength and also the ability to retain calcium while it has a capacity to stimulate a person’s immune system. HIV patients who suffer severe weight loss problems are earmarked as potential Somatropin treatment candidates.

The more common ingredients found in an antiaging HGH treatment include Glutamine, Arginine and Valine. Glutamine has the ability to increase a person’s metabolism and immune system while Arginine has a positive effect on sperm count and body cell rejuvenation. Valine is an agent with qualities known to promote tissue growth as well as aid in muscle recovery.

The Future For HGH Treatment

There is obviously an opportunity for people to abuse this type of treatment. Side effects for mis-use or over-use are drastic and you should only consider it under medical supervision. There is no doubt HGH can be beneficial in treating the effects of time for middle aged people and beyond and in time, it could very well prove to be part of the “fountain of youth” equation. Until then, play it safe and stay within the recommended guidelines.

Aging and hgh..More

June 6th, 2007

Anti aging enthusiasts are often interested in anti aging hgh therapy. This refers to the use of human growth hormone, a hormone naturally produced by the human pituitary gland. The pituitary produces the highest hormone levels in childhood and young adulthood, decreasing production when we are finished growing in our early twenties. With the decrease in HGH, we start to experience weight gain, loss of muscle mass, decreased energy levels, and other subtle symptoms associated with aging. It’s not surprising that the first medicinal use of HGH was to treat children with stunted growth, followed by performance enhancing treatment in athletes. The hormone can only be administered by injection.

It seems obvious that another potential use of the hormone might be anti aging hgh, and an increasing number of people are getting HGH treatments from their doctors. Clinical studies have proven that injections of hgh cause an increase in muscle mass. Other claims for the treatment include protection against age related diseases, younger looking skin, increased energy levels etc.; however, these claims are not backed up so strongly by science. No one really knows what the long term effect of hgh hormone therapy might be. Not surprisingly, a lively debate is ongoing between HGH proponents and an anti aging anti hgh product group.

Anti aging hgh injections have a dark side, of which the injection part is just the beginning. Using the hormone for this purpose is an “off lable” application, at least in the United States, meaning that it hasn’t been approved for this purpose. This may actually be illegal in some jurisdictions. Getting injections from anyone except a medical doctor is illegal as well. Not surprisingly, the injections are very expensive, placing them out of reach for any but the wealthy. Finally, anti aging hgh therapy is associated with some serious side effects, particularly when the level of hormone in the blood rises above the level that can be obtained in the blood naturally. These disadvantages give the anti aging anti hgh product argument considerable strength.

Efforts to address the dark side of anti aging hgh therapy have resulted in a clever modification of the hormone treatment. The vast majority of HGH products available to the public now are formulations designed to stimulate the human pituitary gland to increase its own production of the hormone. With these products, injections are unnecessary, excessive levels of HGH in the circulation are avoided, and the cost comes way down. While the results of this type of therapy are not as dramatic as those with injection, the approach is undoubtedly safer. Many on the anti aging anti hgh product side have embraced this idea as an acceptable compromise. Doubts about what can actually be verified as a positive result of anti aging hgh therapy, however, remain.