Feb
27
HGH & Muscle Growth
February 27, 2009 | Leave a Comment
Scientists have studied the effects of weight training while subjects had a rubber tube semi-tightly tied to the muscle being worked; for the biceps or triceps it was tied on the upper arm and just below the shoulder.
The results were a shockingly high increase in localized growth hormone (HGH) production, and a commesurate level of hypertrophy (muscle growth). And of course, Human Growth Hormone is well known to help repair soft tissue, bone, and connective tissue injuries. Obviously this would be perfect for rehabilitating a biceps or triceps tendon injury or in aiding an overuse injury like tendonitis or tendonosis.
Read about the benefits of the top selling HGH product by clicking here.
Click here to read the entire HGH article.
Feb
26
Sheriff Worried His Deputies Are Using HGH/Steroids
February 26, 2009 | Leave a Comment
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — The Broward Sheriff’s Office is facing a steroid scandal.
“We developed information that 16 of our employees might be using anabolic steroids, so on Friday those 16 people were all directed to submit for drug testing,” BSO spokesman Jim Leljedal told WPBF News 25 in a telephone interview.
Read the entire HGH/steroid article.
Feb
25
Music Increases HGH Levels In Seniors
February 25, 2009 | Leave a Comment
Research has shown playing word or number games keeps the brain active and might just slow down, if not prevent, the onset of dementia. Now, music is being added to the recipe.
Music instructor Michelle Barnard is teaching senior citizens to play the organ. Many of her students wanted to learn but never could when they were young because of the Great Depression. What an irony! Now they’re learning, despite another stint of bad economic times.
“They’re developing hand-eye coordination so that they look at the note and then they put their hands on the keyboard and they associated the note and the key. And what it does for their brain, it sparks some kind of left brain-right brain connection,” Barnard explained.
Playing increases levels of HGH (human growth hormone), a feel-good hormone in our body. Playing also activates the cerebellum.
Read what else HGH can do for you. Click here for honest advice from a doctor.
Feb
24
HGH:Key To Slowing The Aging Process?
February 24, 2009 | Leave a Comment
 Human growth hormone is described by some as the key to slowing the aging process. Before you sign up, get the facts and understand proven ways to promote healthy aging.
Growth hormone is produced by the pituitary gland, a pea-sized structure at the base of the brain, to fuel childhood growth and help maintain tissues and organs throughout life.
Beginning in middle age, however, the pituitary gland slowly reduces the amount of growth hormone (HGH)Â it produces.
This natural slowdown has prompted an interest in the use of synthetic human growth hormone (HGH) to stave off the realities of old age.
Want to read more about HGH products and which is rated the top seller? Click here!
Feb
23
The Strange Relationship Between HGH & GBL
February 23, 2009 | Leave a Comment
GBL, which stands for gamma-Butyrolactone, is a clear liquid that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says is commonly used for degreasing engines and stripping wood floors.
When ingested, it converts into GHB, which the DEA said is used as a sleep aid, a sexual stimulant, a date-rape drug and a steroid alternative.
Pete Rose Jr., son of baseball’s all-time hits leader, pleaded guilty to distributing GBL in 2005 and told ESPN he used it to enhance his sleep and help his recovery from the daily grind of a baseball season. The drug also is said to stimulate human growth hormone (HGH) production.
Read the entire Newsday HGH/GBL article.
Feb
20
Aging, HGH, & Other Hormones
February 20, 2009 | Leave a Comment
Roy Smith says aging is “all hormonally related.”
The head of Scripps Florida’s Department of Metabolism and Aging says “there are the good hormones - testosterone, estrogen, growth hormones (HGH), and there are the bad hormones - cortisol, stress hormones, inflammatory cytokines. My idea is to find a way to replace the good hormones depleted by aging in a physiological way.”
Feb
19
Barry Bonds Steroid/HGH Use:Small Goods?
February 19, 2009 | Leave a Comment
SAN FRANCISCO – Courtroom 10 in the federal courthouse should be free of crude discussion of Barry Bonds’ allegedly shriveled testicles, supposed premature baldness and rumored massive head – at least that was the spirited argument Wednesday in a defense filing in the perjury case.
Attorneys for the former slugger charged that one of the government’s expert witnesses on steroids, Larry Bowers, while the senior managing director of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency and an accomplished chemist, “is not even a medical doctor†and “does not claim to have treated, let alone examined a single individual who was known or suspected of using steroids or HGH.â€
Feb
18
Steroids, Baseball, & HGH
February 18, 2009 | Leave a Comment
The “Steroid Era” in baseball has brought performance-enhancing drugs to the forefront of sports.
Ever since Ben Johnson was stripped of his gold medal from the 1988 Seoul Olympics, steroids have been the main “culprit” of performance-enhancing drugs. But as the careers of players like Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire came into question, a “new” drug surfaced as a major performance enhancer. HGH (human growth hormone) has been used by athletes since the 1970s and is banned by the International Olympic Committee and almost every major sports governing body. But until major-league baseball players started testing positive for HGH, most people didn’t know of it as a major performance enhancer.
Human growth hormone is naturally secreted by the body and stimulates cell growth and reproduction in humans and other animals. The effects of HGH in humans are far reaching and include decreased body fat, increased muscle mass, increased bone density, increased energy levels and immune system function and even improved skin tone and texture. So, you can see why it might be used by elite athletes to improve performance. While supplementing with additional hormones can be dangerous and should only be done under the guidance of a doctor, giving your body all of the chances it can to produce its own HGH is a smart recovery technique for athletes.
Want to read more about HGH and what a doctor recommends for her patients? Click here!
Feb
17
A-Rod Among Celebs & Athletes Using HGH
February 17, 2009 | Leave a Comment
Think it’s only A-Rod and his pals who are taking steroids? Well, what about that actress who buffs up for an action film and cites a carrot juice diet? Sound suspect? Well, that’s because it could be …
The increasing pressure on celebrities, both male and female, athletes and actors, singers and dancers, to be perfect pushes them to extreme measures, and some will take anything they can to get an edge on the competition.
Besides illegal steroids, there is the business of using Human Growth Hormone, which can be legally prescribed, to slow and possibly reverse the aging process.
According to an April, 2007, New York Times report, some “25,000 to 30,000 Americans take injections of growth hormone for anti-aging purposes, paying up to $1,000 a month.†A certain percentage of those folks, of course, are stars — the people many of us admire. And Dr. Patricia Wexler does not approve:
Human Growth Hormone is unsafe. I know dermatologists and actresses who use it to slim abdominal fat and increase muscle tone and libido. But it can accelerate also a hidden cancer to grow. It can cause funny bone spurs to grow and enlargement of the heart … just to name a few of the many reasons why I consider it unsafe.
In other words, when you think you hear the fountain of youth gushing, get a second opinion.
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