Dec
30
Genetic Mutation Impairs HGH Production
December 30, 2008 | Leave a Comment
A genetic mutation that causes a common childhood tumor syndrome also impairs the production of human growth hormone (hgh), according to new findings at Washington University in St. Louis.
The discovery provides new insights into an old mystery: Why are patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 usually shorter than their peers? More important, it may change how scientists seek new treatments for the disorder, which is caused by a mutation in the neurofibromin 1 (NF1) gene and is characterized by an increased risk of cancer.
“We’ve learned that the NF1 gene affects stature through a different pathway than the one we’ve previously focused on to understand cancers in patients,” said David H. Gutmann, who treats patients with the disorder at St. Louis Children’s Hospital.
“Given that this second pathway has been linked to cancer in other disorders, we may need to consider the possibility that it is contributing to these tumors and alter our treatment goals accordingly.”
Neurofibromatosis 1 affects more than 100,000 people in the United States and is one of the most common syndromes that predisposes people to tumors. Details of the new work can be found in the online version of Human Molecular Genetics.
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Dec
29
HGH Increased In Elderly Patients
December 29, 2008 | Leave a Comment
An experimental drug that prompts the body to create more human growth hormone (hgh) may help elderly people increase muscle mass, researchers at the University of Virginia Health System have found.
Dr. Michael O. Thorner, the David C. Harrison Medical Teaching Professor of Internal Medicine at UVa, said the study’s participants who were given MK-677 increased their growth hormone (hgh) levels and insulin-like growth factor to levels normally seen in young adults. They also regained muscle mass lost to aging and fat in their arms and legs. The results of the two-year, double blind study were revealed in the Nov. 4 issue of the medical journal Annals of Internal Medicine. As people age, Thorner said, they secrete less growth hormone and their muscle mass is reduced. A reduction in muscle mass is a hallmark of frailty, a condition that negatively affects the quality and length of a person’s life. “Older people can exercise to improve function, but it doesn’t appear to let them gain much muscle mass,†Thorner said. “Exercise and [MK-677] might be a really powerful combination.â€
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Dec
26
HGH & Sex: The Hard Facts
December 26, 2008 | Leave a Comment
Here is an excerpt on sex/hgh from Grow Young With HGH by Dr. Ronald Klatz:
Sexuality is part and parcel to our being. When we are young, it seems to rule our lives. Whether we are men or women, we are driven by the need to look good, smell good, dress well, make ourselves attractive to those we wish to attract. To be sexy seems to be the very essence of youth. And if the time comes when we no longer feel the need to attract and be attractive to others, it seems as if something has gone out of our lives forever. We have aged in a very real sense. According to the physicians who use human growth hormone (hgh) in their practice, the sexual changes are striking, effecting both men and women. Both sexes report increased libido, while male patients say that they have better erections, better performance, longer duration, and decreased recovery between orgasms. One doctor reports, “We find that the men start looking at young girls again, so we have to treat the wives as well.”
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Dec
25
Merry Chrsitmas!
December 25, 2008 | Leave a Comment
Merry Christmas to you and your family.
Dec
24
Music Teacher Finds HGH Levels Increasing In Her Elderly Students
December 24, 2008 | Leave a Comment
Janice Jensen, a music teacher from KinderVillage in Cary, has hauled four keyboards and stands to Jordan Oaks retirement community without complaint every Monday morning for the past eight weeks.
“I want them to have good equipment,†she said of her four-member class — all residents of Jordan Oaks, all seniors, all having never had a piano lesson a day in their lives.Â
Jensen shared literature detailing studies, like the National Association of Music Merchants-funded 1999 project that found seniors who took group music lessons reported decreased feelings of depression, anxiety and loneliness.
The study also reported that the seniors showed an increase in human growth hormone (hgh), which typically decreases about 75 percent as people age — its depletion contributing to osteoporosis, low energy levels, wrinkling, decreased sexual function, loss of muscle mass and aches and pains.
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Dec
23
McNamee Suing Clemens In HGH Scandal
December 23, 2008 | Leave a Comment
Almost a year to the day after the Mitchell Report was released, Roger Clemens’ former trainer Brian McNamee filed a notice preserving the right to sue the pitcher for defamation.
Clemens immediately attacked McNamee after the Mitchell Report’s release, calling him a “troubled man” and a liar. Clemens told Mike Wallace on “60 Minutes” Jan. 6 that he never used performance-enhancing drugs like human growth hormone (hgh). Clemens made similar comments before Congress in February at a congressional hearing on the Mitchell Report. Congress then referred Clemens’ case to the Justice Department for investigation of perjury. That investigation is still ongoing.
McNamee has been unable to resume his career as a trainer in the wake of the report.
Dec
22
Pharmacy Must Forfeit Millions In Illegal HGH Case
December 22, 2008 | Leave a Comment
The corporate owners of a Colorado Springs pharmacy have agreed to forfeit $3.5 million worth of proceeds from the sale of a banned human growth hormone (hgh) under a settlement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
The agreement, announced Friday, caps one phase of the government’s case against College Pharmacy. The pharmacy’s former owner, Thomas Bader, and former employees Kevin Henry and Bradley Blum were indicted by a federal grand jury in August 2007 on criminal charges they illegally imported banned Chinese human growth hormone, or hgh, and sold it to doctors in four states. Bader and Henry are awaiting trials set for April.
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Dec
19
Older Adults Gain Muscle When HGH Levels Increase
December 19, 2008 | Leave a Comment
AÂ person’s muscle weight is influenced by many factors, including hormones. For instance, human growth hormone (HGH) levels decrease with age, and this drop is associated with a decline in muscle mass.
A new study in the “Annals of Internal Medicine” takes a unique look at this aspect of metabolism. Researchers asked if they could curtail the decline in human growth hormone (hgh) and whether doing so would help people improve their muscle weight. For two years, they studied 65 healthy adults (men and women), ages 60 to 81. They divided them into two groups — one took a placebo, and the other took ghrelin mimetic, a substance to stimulate production of growth hormone. Result: Those receiving ghrelin mimetic did, indeed, increase human growth hormone (hgh) and muscle mass.
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Dec
17
Ohio Man Imported Illegal HGH
December 17, 2008 | Leave a Comment
A Greenfield, Ohio man posted bond today in Highland County Court on charges of purchasing and possessing a dangerous drug, human growth hormone (hgh), after an arrest last week that involved both local and federal law enforcement agencies.
Christopher Chad Gose, 33, of Greenfield, was arrested Thursday by Greenfield Police after agents of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) notified the department that a package inbound from China was intercepted in the U.S. Postal system on its way to an address in Greenfield. The package was believed to contain humane growth hormone (hgh), a drug known to be abused by some athletes and bodybuilders that is illegal to possess or use without a prescription.
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Dec
16
Aerobic Workout Releases Key Hormones Linked to Increasing HGH
December 16, 2008 | Leave a Comment
A vigorous 60-minute workout on a treadmill affects the release of two key appetite hormones, ghrelin and peptide YY, while 90 minutes of weight lifting affects the level of only ghrelin, according to a new study.Â
Taken together, the research shows that aerobic exercise is better at suppressing appetite than non-aerobic exercise and provides a possible explanation for how that happens. Ghrelin was discovered by researchers in Japan only about 10 years ago and was originally identified for its role as a growth hormone (hgh). Only later did its role in stimulating appetite become known. Peptide YY was discovered less than 25 years ago.
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