Jan

27

Doctors are worried that as the New Year begins, many Americans will resolve to be thinner in 2010 by using over-the-counter supplements. According to a survey conducted by ADSAM and SenseUs polling companies, about 60 percent of physicians feel troubled about the safety of taking diet pills. Not surprisingly, while physicians feel negatively about the safety of over-the-counter diet pills, they are much more comfortable about the use of injections like Botox and Restylane or even breast implants.

The results were surprising, considering America’s obsession with remaining fit and youthful. Additionally, the same survey showed that feelings about having breast augmentation or facial injections and using over-the-counter diet pills or Human Growth Hormone (HGH) for anti-aging created fear and stress among the large majority of consumers. Although consumers were apprehensive about over-the-counter solutions, the survey results discovered that they were more comfortable with diet pills than cosmetic procedures.

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Jan

22

Dieting & HGH

January 22, 2010 | Leave a Comment

In his new book, Dr. Michael Aziz, Manhattan internist, reveals a revolutionary eating plan that has helped thousands of his patients lose weight without feeling hungry, by stabilizing ten key hormone levels.

Low fat diets wreak havoc on insulin levels increasing hunger: It may also lead to vitamin deficiencies, and often result in consumption of too much sugar and artificial sweeteners. In addition the process that makes foods low in fat often introduces unnecessary chemicals into your body. The most popular low carb diets can shut down the growth hormone (hgh) which keeps you fit, create problems with your thyroid, or cause cellular damage.

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Jan

21

“(McGwire) says, ‘Well, (the use of PEDs) doesn’t help eye-and-hand coordination.’ Well, of course it does. It allows you more acuity physically and mentally and optically. You are going to be stronger and you are going to be better,” Hall of Fame catcher Carlton Fisk told the Chicago Tribune.

“There’s a reason they call it performance-enhancing drugs. That’s what it does - performance enhancement,” Fisk told the paper. “You can be good, but it’s going to make you better. You can be average, but it is going to make you good. If you are below average, it is going to make you average. Some guys who went that route got their five-year, $35 million contracts and now are off into the sunset somewhere. Because once they can’t use (steroids and HGH) anymore, they can’t play anymore. And steroids, during that time, probably did as much to escalate players’ salaries as did free agency, as did arbitration, and all of that stuff.”

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Jan

20

Times Writer Tammy Worth reports on the troubling trend of prescribing human growth hormone (HGH) off-label to prevent physical decline in elderly men.

 

“Again,” she writes, “research on the safety and benefits of HGH is mixed, and the National Institute on Aging says there is no conclusive evidence that the hormone can reduce the physical decline that comes with age.” Studies have shown that men who received HGH injections are, however, more likely to develop carpal tunnel syndrome and diabetes. Other potential risks include heart failure and cancer. In fact, research suggests that low HGH levels in old age may actually protect against cancer.

 

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Jan

18

Women aren’t the only ones who’ve been sold (and pretty much bought, until recently, at least) the idea that a natural life passage, menopause, is a medical condition that requires hormone therapy medication — that is, if you want to avoid becoming a wizened, sexless, neurotic hag.

During the past decade, men have been receiving a similar sales pitch. They’re now told that they, too, have a middle-aged passage (andropause!) that requires hormonal supplements, mostly testosterone. Only by keeping their body’s stock of this hormone at a youthful level, claim the supplements’ advocates, can men avoid “testosterone deficiency syndrome” and maintain their energy, muscle mass, memory and sex drive into old age.

The sales pitch seems to be working. As reported today in the Los Angeles Times, sales of testosterone prescriptions have jumped from 64,800 in 1999 to 3.3 million in 2008. But is there any evidence to support the beneficial claims made for testosterone? And what are the known risks of taking supplements of this hormone?

 

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Jan

14

It used to be that when you said the words “gym,” “workout,” and especially “weight room,” you could practically sniff the testosterone in the air.

And the mental picture? Beads of masculine sweat dropping onto filthy mats and the kind of tight muscle tees that only people on HGH favor today. That was then (the dark ages) and this is now. When it comes to specific fitness activities, today women frequently outnumber men. Women are more likely than men to engage in fitness activities for at least 100 days per year, and many of them are doing it at women’s-only fitness clubs. And professionally, women continue to gain high-profile access to traditionally male sports, as when women’s boxing was added to the 2012 Olympic Games this past August.

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Jan

12

The strategy that Mark McGwire used Monday to lay out his admission to using steroids demonstrated that lessons were learned from other baseball stars who preceded him in making mea culpa about their drug use.

McGwire had been silent since his embarrassing refusal to discuss his steroid use during a Congressional hearing nearly five years ago. His strategy back then, concocted with avoiding prosecution on his mind, made him appear hapless and as guilty as if he had confessed. This time, McGwire and his handlers surely knew his credibility would be enhanced if he confessed before spring training and made himself widely available, not only on Monday but Tuesday. An interview with ESPN is to be scheduled, but because it’s not exclusive, its thunder will be muted. McGwire’s personality has usually been low key, and he has not always been comfortable with the news media. In his repeated confessions Monday, he had no defiance or anger, just sadness and tears.

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Jan

7

A hormone that is crucial for normal growth in height is the Growth Hormone (HGH). It is made by the pituitary gland located in the middle of the head at the base of the brain.

Growth hormone affects glucose and fat metabolism, the production of protein to sustain new cell development and, most importantly, it stimulates bone growth at the growth plates located at the ends of the bones. Children with growth hormone deficiency usually have a dramatic slowing of growth. They may have younger looking faces than their actual age, but have normal body proportions. Diagnosis is made with blood tests and treatment is by regular injections of human growth hormone or one of its analogues. Treatment should continue until the bone growth plates fuse indicating that growth is completed. Unlike many other hormones, replacement growth hormone is very expensive.

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Jan

6

Colorado Springs pharmacy owner Thomas Bader knew he was breaking the law by importing and distributing human growth hormones from China, prosecutors charged Tuesday.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jaime Peña told a federal jury that Bader and a sales representative had an attitude as they pursued their illicit business.

“They told us we couldn’t do it so we did it anyway,” Peña said, describing that attitude in opening statements of a trial in which Bader, 67, is accused of conspiracy, smuggling and illegal distribution of the hormones. Prosecutors contend the hormones lacked U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval.

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Jan

5

Peeing in a cup was never more complicated. Pants down – nearly to the knees. Shirt up – mid-torso, please. “You’ll wash your hands thoroughly,” says the 2010 Olympic doping control officer. “Use little soap… . You’ll raise your shirt mid-torso and drop your pants to your to mid-thigh so I have a clear and unobstructed view.”

Taunton said testing is more sophisticated each year and is able to detect the tiniest amounts of banned substances that may have slipped through in earlier Games. Among banned substances under scrutiny are anabolic steroids, human growth hormone (HGH) and EPO, an artificial hormone that can boost performance of endurance athletes. “Now we have technology that can test smaller and smaller amounts.” Taunton said testing is moving more toward blood sampling, rather than relying on urine testing. Vanoc workers who collect blood are trained phlebotomists, who take samples for a living and are loaned to the Games by Life Labs, a company that provides laboratory services.

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