Feb
15
Olympics & HGH
February 15, 2010 | Leave a Comment
With the Olympics upon, in case you already didn’t know from the bombardment of commercials on an hourly basis, you knew it was going to be a matter of time before someone or some 30 people were going to be nailed for cheating.
It has happened, and WADA President John Fahey is claiming that testing has improved.
Not so fast.
Has the testing improved in all areas of sports, professional and amateur? Yes it has. Have they caught all of the cheats in every sport? Not a chance.
We have seen this before. The number of cheats caught before the games in Beijing…70. Number caught before Vancouver…30. I see a couple of problems with the logic showing the testing is working. One was obvious, different athletes, different sports, different games. If they were comparing numbers from Turin to Vancouver, then I see the logical comparison.
The other is the same argument that I’ve had with a bunch of people for the last little while.
The cheaters are always somehow going to be ahead of the testing. There are always someone going to be working in a lab trying to find the way to get around the testing. It happens all the time.
Baseball had their steroid problem. MLB started testing for steroids, the ball players went to new and innovative stuff like the cream, the clear, and HGH.
You take away one avenue, someone is going to find another way to their goal.
The Olympics and all sports can throw out all the rules they want and test for everything, as long as there is motivation to win, someone will be willing to take that extra step.
Stick with LEGAL and SAFE HGH products, like Maximum Result. Check it out by clicking here!
Read the entire HGH/Olympics article
Jan
5
Olympic Testing:HGH & Other Banned Substances
January 5, 2010 | Leave a Comment
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.â€
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.
Want to read more about the all natural HGH product used by athletes and trainers? Click here.
Read the entire Olympic/HGH article
Dec
15
Tiger Woods’ Doctor Under Investigation For HGH
December 15, 2009 | Leave a Comment
A Canadian doctor who has treated many NFL players as well as Olympic medalists like Donovan Bailey and the world’s top golfer, Tiger Woods, is under criminal investigation in the United States. He is suspected of providing athletes with performance-enhancing drugs, according to several people who have been briefed on the investigation.
The F.B.I. investigation of Dr. Anthony Galea, a sports medicine specialist who has treated hundreds of professional athletes across many sports, follows his arrest on Oct. 15 in Toronto by the Canadian police. Human growth hormone and Actovegin, a drug extracted from calf’s blood, were found in his medical bag at the United States-Canada border in late September. Using, selling or importing Actovegin is illegal in the United States.
Click here to read more about the top selling HGH product!
Read the entire Tiger Woods/HGH article
Sep
1
Ask The Doc: With Steroid & HGH Testing, Is Blood Or Urine Best?
September 1, 2009 | Leave a Comment
Drug testing has become an institution in the sports world, mixed martial arts included. However, when it comes to the actual testing, both blood and urine tests are available.
Urine testing is cheaper, less invasive (no needle stick required) and has fewer potential complications (not unless peeing on your hand is considered a complication) than blood testing. Blood screening is more sensitive (more likely to detect a banned substance), detects more banned substances, and is more difficult to beat through “masking” methods. Blood screening is the current standard for detecting abnormally elevated levels of synthetic human growth hormone (HGH). There is a new and promising HGH urine test that was developed at George Mason University. The new test uses nanotechnology to bind and amplify HGH in urine so that it may be detectable for a longer period of time. Blood screening can only detect HGH taken within the previous 24 to 48 hours. Nanotechnology may allow urine detection out to that two-week range. It will take forever (exaggeration) to get the test approved to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) standards. WADA must be sure that the test can withstand the legal assault that is certain to be waged with the first positive sample. WADA has outlined six classes of prohibited substances: stimulants; narcotics; anabolic agents/steroids; diuretics; peptide hormones and related compounds; and other restricted drugs.
Read the entire MMAJunkie/HGH article.
Aug
31
Current State of HGH
August 31, 2009 | Leave a Comment
Writer Shaun Murphy exchanged emails with John T. Wendt, Associate Professor in the Ethics and Business Law Department of the University of St. Thomas, on the subject of HGH. Professor Wendt specializes in sports law and Olympic policies and business. His latest published work in the winter of ’09 was titled, “The Road to Beijing and Beyond: A Time of Transition in the War on Doping.â€
Professor Wendt described the current state of Human Growth Hormone. “There are a many misperceptions about Human Growth Hormone (HGH). For athletes it is promoted all over the internet saying that it will accelerate healing and rehabilitation following injury, and increases your cardiac output and athletic performance. Claims have been made that HGH is anti-aging or can even reverse aging.â€
Nov
11
“Workable” Testing For HGH Targeted
November 11, 2008 | Leave a Comment
 Current HGH tests can only detect the use within a period of 24 to 36 hours, making it easy to beat, and new testing is definitely needed.
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Make no mistake, there really is a test that can detect the abuse of human growth hormone (HGH) by athletes. A blood test, it was used at the recent Olympics in Beijing, as well as at the Games in Turin and Athens.
But because there hasn’t been one positive result in more than 8,000 tests conducted on Olympic athletes, skeptics question its effectiveness. Because it can detect the use of HGH only within a period of 24 to 36 hours, and hasn’t been widely implemented in out-of-competition testing, the test is easy to beat.
Read the entire Denver Post/HGH article
Aug
28
Olympians Used HGH & Other Performance Enhancing Drugs?
August 28, 2008 | Leave a Comment
A news report on SportsIllustrated.com linking Jamaican Olympians Delloreen Ennis-London and Adrian Findlay to performance-enhancing drugs, including human growth hormone (HGH)Â has received mixed reactions by readers of the website.
The article, co-written by Luis Fernando Llosa and L Jon Wertheim, stated that SI obtained documents stating that between June 2006 and February 2007, two shipments of Somatropin (Human Growth Hormone, HGH) and one shipment of Triest (Estrogen) were sent to Delloreen London at a Texas address, while in November 2006 a shipment of Testosterone, Testosterone Aqueous, and Oxandrolone were sent to Adrian Findlay.
Aug
21
Now, A â€Gene†Recipe Which Includes HGH, To Create Super-Athletes
August 21, 2008 | Leave a Comment
 Less ambitious forms of gene doping may be right around the corner.
This will do away with the troublesome virus-based delivery system, as this type of doping would inject “naked†DNA directly into a muscle.
Nearby cells would take up some of the DNA, and if that DNA controls an important hormone, like EPO or human growth hormone (HGH), it would do the job well.
Though it wonâ€t be different from injecting EPO or HGH directly, but it would save money, because it would only have to be done once.
“You could probably get a molecular-biology major to make it for you for a couple hundred dollars,†said Sweeney.
Read the entire HGH article here
Aug
15
Couch Potato’s Guide To Performance-Enhancing Drugs Like HGH
August 15, 2008 | Leave a Comment
A recent article at CTVCA.com talks about some of the banned substances at the2008 Olympics. Here are several examples: erythropoietin (EPO), human growth hormone (hGH), insulins.
What they do: These substances influence specific bodily functions.
Why use them: EPO stimulates production of red blood cells, which improves the amount of oxygen the blood can deliver to the muscles; human growth hormone (hgh) stimulates production of another growth factor, which in turn stimulates cartilage production for stronger bones and muscles; insulin can promote muscle growth and definition.
Side effects: EPO thickens the blood, which causes the heart to work harder and makes the blood more susceptible to clotting;Â human growth hormone (hgh)Â can lead to protruding jaw and eyebrow bones, as well as glucose intolerance; insulin can lead to low blood sugar levels, which can cause nausea, weakness, shortness of breath, coma and even death.
Read what other everyday people like you and me have to say about a safe HGH alternative-click here!
May
9
One Mayor Speaks On HGH/Steroid Use & Teens
May 9, 2008 | Leave a Comment
Floral Park, New York’s mayor, Phil Guarnieri recently made issue with drug use and teens:
This is not a moral indictment of the modern athlete who often sees doping not only as not cheating but necessary in order to be competitive. The temptations are frightfully seductive since these drugs are extremely effective, the payoffs staggeringly high and the prospect of getting caught, despite recent revelations, generally low. I have little doubt that if steroids had been around when Babe Ruth was playing, the Babe, phenomenal ballplayer though he was, would have been chugging the stuff down in his beer.
As the pharmacological revolution grows ever more sophisticated and the prospect of genetic manipulation ever more real its allures will challenge our young people as never before. Already, more than a million teenagers have experimented, to a lesser and greater degree, with anabolic steroids and human growth hormone(HGH). Floral Park’s youth is not exempt to its nefarious influences and it is well to remember that the long-term health impact of these chemical enhancers is still not fully understood.
We found a safe and effective HGH product for adults that is 100% legal. Click here for the details!
The Entire HGH/Steroid Article
keep looking »Recommended Links
GET YOUR FREE HGH &
ANTI-AGING REPORT!
- Get your own FREE copy of the groundbreaking report, "Seven Age Reversing Secrets" – packed with valuable tips and tricks to help you fight the aging process and have the highest quality of life possible!