Nov

11

The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) released new medical guidelines for the accurate diagnosis and effective ethical treatment of growth hormone deficiency in affected patients.

“Although there is not a wealth of medical data published concerning HGH as a recovery tool for injured athletes, it’s certainly not an approved indication for use,” Dr. David Cook, Interim Division Chief of Endocrinology at the Oregon Health & Science University, and co-author of the new medical guidelines said. “These guidelines are the result of recent advancements in our understanding of the benefits of growth hormone replacement for patients,” Dr. Cook said.
Responsiveness to growth hormone therapy is often determined by many variables, such as age, sex, adiposity, and concurrent medications. However, even after accounting for these variables, there remain highly individual differences in the response to growth hormone. “Controlled trials, using strict dosing regimes and measuring clinical end points, such as body composition and insulin sensitivity, have shown us that growth hormone (HGH) dosing should be individualized, with close attention to avoiding side effects,” Dr. Cook said.

Want to read more about what a doctor has to say about HGH? Click here.

Read the entire AACE/HGH article

Oct

7

The medical community is all over the place on the subject of HGH (human growth hormone).

The American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine (worldhealth.net) endorses Cenegenics and similar programs, so if you want to believe it works, that’s the place to start investigating. Other doctors consider the science a form of snake-oil marketing. The official position of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists is that HGH “as an anti-aging treatment is not recommended.” Read more at aace.com.

So what HGH product SHOULD we use? What works? What is safe? Read what a doctor has to say by clicking here.

Read the entire AACE/HGH article.

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