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Your Online Guide » Guide to Health » Human Growth Hormone

[H1811]Human And Growth Development
by Janice Wee, Jan

In the 1950s, Human Growth Hormone injections were used to help children who had growth problems. It was only in the 1990s that Human Growth Hormone injections were used for antiaging reasons. This turn in events came about when a 6-month-test conducted on just 12 men, giving these men daily injections of human growth hormones cause them to reduce 14.4% body fat and gain 8% lean muscle mass.

That interesting effect was enough to make it popular with bodybuilders. Isn't that the goal of body builders? To build muscle and reduce fat. Human Growth Hormones have that effect on men.

Athletes too were interested in boosting their performance with the use of growth hormone injections. Besides building lean muscle and trimming off the fat, human growth hormones (HGH) helps the body manufacture red blood cells. That boosts the endurance levels of athletes. When competition is that keen, every advantage helps and HGH gives them that competitive edge.

Besides, growth hormone injections are safer than steroids, or are they?

Human growth hormones are produced by the pituitary gland found at the base of your brain.

Growth hormones promote cell growth. Unfortunately cancer happens when cell growth becomes uninhibited. Is there a link between Human Growth Hormones and cancer? So far, mice given far higher doses relative to body weight than what a human may use die younger than their counterparts who have low growth hormone levels.

Possible side effects with the use of HGH injections include edema, joint pain, diabetes and carpal tunnel syndrome. Not enough is known yet about the long term side effects of HGH injections to declare how safe they really are.

HGH injections don't come cheap either? They can cost $500 to $1000 a month to even more than $15,000 a year. Yet many older people are flocking to clinics for HGH jabs in a bid to regain their youth. THese jabs may be given as medical treatment to people who are really deficient in that hormone.

It is not just the men who are interested in growth hormone injections. Women too are turning to HGH to boost bone density, to lower their body fat, and basically, to regain the health of their youth.

There are other ways to boost your body's human growth hormones levels other than exercise. Swallowing the hormone wouldn't help as it cannot get past your digestive system. Instead of injections, you could get your body to produce more growth hormones through exercise and enough sleep.


The recent controversy over steroid and human growth hormone use in the sport of baseball has focused public attention on the potential benefits and risks of somatropin or HGH. Use of HGH injections as a treatment to stop aging or for athletic enhancement is illegal, yet the physical and cosmetic allure of a substance some hail as the ?fountain of youth? causes many to ignore the law or to seek ways to boost their own body's production of HGH naturally.

The human body produces HGH as a fuel for childhood growth and for the healthy maintenance of organs and tissues in adult life. Primarily, HGH works to build height in growing children while increasing bone strength and muscle mass. By the time humans reach the age of 40, however, the pituitary gland, which sits at the base of the brain and produces the HGH, begins to slowly reduce the amounts released into the system. An increasingly popular theory holds that this reduction causes the weakening and failure of the body during the aging process, leading to the seemingly logical conclusion that by supplementing HGH such deterioration can be forestalled.

Synthetic human growth hormone, available legally as a prescription only and administered through an intramuscular injection, has been approved to treat children and adults diagnosed with growth hormone deficiency or with diseases that cause short stature. (It is also used to offset the wasting of muscle experienced by patients with AIDS and HIV.) Used in these ways, HGH has been shown to increase bone density and muscle mass while decreasing body fat and enhancing the heart's ability to contract. At the same time, HGH seems to give the recipient more motivation, a better mood, and a much higher capacity to exercise. It isn't surprising that athletes and others for whom endurance, appearance, and physical fitness are high priorities would be tempted by the drug's promise.

However, when HGH is used in the absence of a condition that calls for the treatment, numerous side effects can result including muscle and arthritis pain, headaches, and swelling in the extremities. Some people experience wrist pain that mimics carpal tunnel syndrome. High blood pressure, hardening of the arteries, and diabetes are all possibilities as is bloating and abnormal bone and organ growth. HGH can also stimulate the growth of cancers, cysts, and similar abnormalities. In addition to these frightening effects, people who subvert the ban on HGH and seek the injections are looking at expenses of about $75 a day or $2,000 a month. Needless to say, insurance isn't going to cover those costs.

In light of these issues many people turn to HGH supplements in tablet form that purport to ?release? or stimulate the body's own HGH production. Because the pituitary gland experiences the greatest activity during the night, the pills are taken at bedtime. While this is obviously the safer route to enhancing the body's supply of HGH with no known side effects, there is also no conclusive proof that these ?releasers? work. (At the same time there are plenty of web sites in the ?quack? genre hawking all manner of HGH delivery systems, like oral sprays, even though studies have shown that growth hormone cannot penetrate the oral membranes and stomach acids would break down the hormone before it could have any effect.)

Experts are in agreement that while HGH is a potent treatment in the presence of highly specific illnesses, the risks far outweigh any potential benefits in considering the drug for cosmetic use. Studies conducted on older test subjects showed that while HGH increased their muscle mass, it did not build their strength. Overall, a reasonable program of strength training paired with a good diet will do more to minimize the effects of aging without subjecting the individual to the painful and potentially life-threatening side effects found with off-label HGH use.
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Both Janice Wee & Rob Parker are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Janice Wee has sinced written about articles on various topics from Birthday Gifts, Women and Makeup. talks about the use of HGH in older women and alternatives to growth hormone injections.. Janice Wee's top article generates over 33100 views. to your Favourites.

Rob Parker has sinced written about articles on various topics from Real Estate, Network Marketing and Real Estate. Educate yourself before seeking a consultation for any surgical cosmetic procedure. It's the best way to keep costs manageable!. Rob Parker's top article generates over 301000 views. to your Favourites.
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