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Growth Hormone, the
real "fountain of youth!"
by James South MA
to
order growth hormone
On July 5th 1990, Americas
most prestigious medical journal, the New England Journal of Medicine, published
a human clinical study that changed the world of anti-aging medicine forever.
Daniel Rudman, MD and colleagues
reported the results of their 6-month trial of synthetic human growth hormone
(HGH) with 12 elderly men, aged 61 to 81. Astoundingly, without any change in
diet, exercise, lifestyle, smoking etc., the 12 men gained muscle, lost fat,
increased their bone density, thickened their skin and expanded their livers and
spleens almost 20%.
In effect, HGH reversed the
biological age of the subjects by 10 to 20 years!
HGH, the history
Prior to Rudmans landmark
study, hGH use had been restricted to two classes of people: young children,
whose growth was severely stunted due to serious hGH deficiency and adults whose
pituitary glands had been damaged or destroyed by injury, illness or radiation.
Prior to 1985, HGH was in
extremely short supply. It was painstakingly extracted from the pituitary glands
of human cadavers.
Human use of HGH began in 1958
when endocrinologist Maurice Raben injected HGH into a dwarf child. The child
began to grow normally and over the next 30 years thousands of children were
injected with cadaver derived HGH.
By 1985 the company that
pioneered recombinant DNA technology, Genetech, had produced the first synthetic
HGH, opening the way to mass production of hGH.
HGH is an extremely large and
complex hormone, consisting of 191 specific amino acids linked in a 3
dimensional structure. Because it is a complex protein, HGH cannot survive
digestion and must be taken by injection.
Genetechs product, Protropin,
differed from natural HGH by one amino acid, but this did not affect its
performance in the human body. The following year, the Drug Company Eli Lilly
succeeded in making a 191 amino acid HGH that was 100% physically, chemically
and biologically identical to HGH produced by the human pituitary gland.
Lillys Humatrope was
also approved by the USA FDA for both research and medical use and became what
many clinicians now consider the "gold standard" of recombinant DNA
produced hGH. Finally in 1996, thanks to the pioneering medical and legal work
of Dr. Edmund Chein, the FDA lifted its ban on the use of HGH for adult
patients.
HGH clinical studies
From 1994 through 1996, over 800
people were treated with HGH at Dr. Cheins clinic. In 1995, Chein began his
collaboration with Dr. L. Cass Terry. Terry used his skills as an academic
researcher to help Chein turn the mass of clinical data gathered from his
patients, into a meaningful statistical profile of results. These results would
demonstrate to both scientists and the public, the safety and efficacy of HGH in
improving a broad array of human health parameters in adults.
Chein and Terrys data were
published for the first time in Dr. Ronald Klatzs 1997 book Grow young
with HGH.
HGH is secreted by the pituitary
gland, a tiny gland at the base of the brain. It is normally secreted in
pulsatile bursts, with the largest daily amount being secreted in the first few
hours of deep, slow wave sleep.
For reasons of convenience, Dr.
Rudman in his 1990 study had given his 12 elderly men only 3 injections of HGH
per week, at a high dose of 16 IU.
In a study published in 1996, Dr.
Maxine Papadakis of UCSF reported mixed results with the identical high dose,
low frequency protocol of HGH injections. Although both Rudman and Papadakis
found significant multiple benefits, especially on the body composition of the
subjects, they also reported some unpleasant side effects. These included carpal
tunnel syndrome (wrist pain), gynecomastia (enlarged breasts), pains in both
large and small joints and edema (excess fluid) in the legs.
Papadakis team also noted,
however, that the side effects disappeared or decreased markedly within 2 weeks
after the HGH dose was lowered by 25 to 50%.
Chein and Terry chose to adopt an
injection regimen, which more closely approximated the natural rhythms of normal
HGH secretion. Their clinic patients were taught to self administer HGH
injections subcutaneously (just below the skin), just before bedtime and upon
arising 6 days per week. A weekly day of rest from injections was taken to
prevent the patients pituitary glands from getting "lazy" and
ceasing whatever HGH secretion their gland was still releasing.
A dose of 0.3 to 0.7 IU of HGH
was given twice daily, for a weekly total of about 4 to 8 IU HGH. Thus, Chein
and Terrys weekly dose was only about one quarter to one half of the dose
Rudman and Papadakis gave their patients 3 times weekly.
Chein and Terry have not found
any major side effects among their 800 patients. Minor joint aches and pains and
slight fluid retention are the only side effects they have found, and these
generally disappear in the first month or two of treatment.
Chein and Terry believe their
lower dose; natural rhythm HGH protocol is responsible for the minimal incidence
of severity of side effects in their patients.
Based on the results of randomly
selected questionnaires from 202 patients, aged 39 to 74 (15% women), Chein and
Terry reported many outstanding benefits of their low dose, high frequency HGH
program.
Over 80% improved, while 72%
noted significant fat loss. 60 to 70% found improvement in skin texture,
thickness, elasticity and wrinkle disappearance, while 38% reported new hair
growth. 55 to 71% found improved healing capacity and healing of injuries, while
73% reported increased resistance to common illness.
A high incidence of improvement
in sexual functioning and menstrual/ menopausal health was noted.
Also 62 to 84% of subjects
enjoyed increases in energy levels, emotional stability, positive attitude and
memory.
HGHs biology
To fully understand the
significance of the positive results reported by Rudman, Papadakis, Chein and
Terry (as well as many others too numerous to mention in this short article), it
is necessary to understand the basics of the biology of HGH.
HGH is one of many hormones
secreted by the pituitary gland. Hormones are chemical messengers that help
guide, direct and control the complex integration between (and physiologic
functions of) our organs, tissues and cells.
Just as there is a hierarchy of
control in an army, with generals directing colonels, who direct majors and
captains, with orders eventually directing the corporals and privates to action,
so the human glandular system is ordered and functions hierarchically.
The general of the hierarchy is
the human brain, which affects the connecting link between the nervous system
and the glandular system- the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus portion of the
brain, activated by nerve signals from elsewhere in the brain, secretes
releasing hormones, which in turn cause the pituitary to release its hormones.
Pituitary hormones, such as ACTH,
thyrotropin and luteinizing hormone (LH), trigger other glands to release their
hormones.
ACTH triggers the adrenals to
secrete cortisol, thyrotropin causes thyroid hormone release and LH activates
the sex glands to release their hormones.
Finally, these primary action
hormones affect their target tissues- e.g. the sex hormones control the
reproductive organs, thyroid hormone activates brain, liver, heart and muscles,
while cortisol alters immune, brain and fat tissue, etc.
Out of all the various pituitary
hormones, HGH has the most universal action, ultimately affecting every cell of
the body. Unfortunately, HGH shows the greatest and most precipitous drop with
age.
HGH and its age related decrease
According to data from the April
1995 Journal of NIH Research, a healthy 10-year-old might secrete 2000mcg
HGH per day. By age 20 hGH secretion has already dropped to 700mcg per day (a
75% drop!). 400mcg is secreted on average by 30, while from 40 to 80 hGH drops
from about 325mcg to 225mcg per day.
Yet ironically, research has
shown that the somatotrophs (HGH producing cells within the pituitary) of
elderly people are frequently making as much HGH as young people! The problem
then lies with defective HGH release and not manufacture.
Many factors (possibly including
some nutrients) enhance HGH release; many all too common factors also inhibit
HGH release.
Intense exercise, adrenaline
mediated stress, emotional excitement, fasting and calorie restricted diets
enhance growth hormone release.
While the "state of
siege" stress hormone- cortisol, insulin excess and insulin resistance,
obesity (especially abdominal obesity) and high blood levels of free fatty
acids, all inhibit hGH release and at the same time that our cells are becoming
less sensitive to HGHs effects.
When the pituitary in response to
hypothalamic releasing factors secretes HGH, it only remains in the bloodstream
for minutes. During this brief flare of activity, HGH induces the liver to
produce various growth factors, especially Insulin like Growth Factor One
(IGF-1).
While HGH has some direct benefit
on the health, metabolism and structure of our trillions of cells, much of
HGHs benefit is mediated through IGF-1 and other growth factors HGH induces.
Between them, HGH and IGF-1 help
deliver to our cells the raw materials needed for repair and renovation.
HGH the ultimate anti-oxidant?
According to Doctors Thierry
Hertaghe and Vince Giampapa the latest European research indicates hGH and IGF-1
can go beyond the current antioxidant based anti-aging remedies in slowing,
preventing and reversing aging at the cellular level.
Grace Wong of Genetech has shown
that as we age cell proteins, as well as the DNA and RNA that provide the
blueprint for making protein and other needed cell constituents, suffer ever
accumulating damage.
A major cause of this age related
cellular degradation is the ever-increasing incidence of free radicals released
during normal cellular activity. These free radicals activate protease's,
destructive enzymes that damage and degrade essential cell proteins and
structures.
Antioxidants, such as vitamins C
and E, SOD, etc., can reduce cellular levels of free radicals and thus reduce
activation of the damaging proteases.
But HGH can actually activate a
cellular defense force of protease inhibitors. Thus, even if high levels of free
radicals cant be avoided, the protease inhibitors prevent the free radicals
from triggering cell destructive proteases.
Thus Hertoghe and Giampapa note
that HGH and IGF-1 can do what antioxidants cannot. Antioxidants can only reduce
damage to already existing cell proteins and structures. HGH and IGF-1 help pull
into the cell the nutrients needed to repair renovate and rebuild cellular
structures. IGF-1 can even deliver nucleic acids (the building blocks of the
genes) right into the protected citadel of the cell nucleus, where the DNA and
genes, which direct our cellular architecture, reside.
Thus unlike antioxidants, HGH and
IGF-1 dont just reduce cellular damage, they actively promote the healing and
regeneration of aging cells.
As recently as the early
1980s, many medical texts focused on HGHs role primarily as the hormone
necessary to achieve normal height and bone development. Yet the clinical human
researches, as well as the basic research on HGH of the past 20 years, has now
shown that hGH/ IGF-1 affects every aspect of human biology.
HGH enhancing the immune system
One of the many systems that
weakens as we age is our immune system. Infectious ailments that might barely
bother a healthy 20-year-old may be fatal to a typically immune compromised
elderly person.
A key biomarker of aging is the
"involution" or disappearance of the thymus gland. The thymus gland is
the director and activator of the immune system. It secretes hormones such as
thymosin and thymoietin, which regulate the immune system.
The thymus also transforms
immature T-cells into programmed germ killing warriors. Researchers have been
able to reverse the thymic atrophy of old rats through HGH, so that their thymus
glands became as large and robust as the thymus glands of healthy young rats.
It is now known that the activity
of all major immune cell types, such as T-cells, B-cells, natural killer (NK)
cells and macrophages, can be beneficially altered by hGH/ IGF-1.
Greg Fahey of the Naval Medical
Research Institute, Bethesda MD, has noted that immune restoration has multiple
benefits. These include improved ability to make DNA, have normal cell division,
normal insulin sensitivity, normal thyroid hormone levels and more normal brain
chemistry.
HGH affecting insulin and
physical make-up
HGHs ability to normalize age
impaired insulin sensitivity is an exciting area of current research. Clinical
studies with HGH routinely show reductions in human body fat with simultaneous
increases in lean body mass (muscle and organ tissue).
For example, in 6 months of HGH
treatment at Sahlgrenska Hospital in Sweden, HGH deficient adults lost 20% of
their body fat. Most of this fat loss occurred in abdominal fat, reduced by 30%,
compared with a 13% reduction in peripheral (e.g. arm and leg) fat.
It is increased abdominal fat
that is strongly correlated with increased incidence of heart attacks,
hypertension and diabetes.
In a short term 1994 study with 9
obese women, just 5 weeks of HGH treatment was sufficient to show significant
fat loss and lean tissue gain. In this double blind crossover study, the women
lost an average of 4.6 pounds of body fat (mostly abdominal), while their lean
body mass increased 6.6 pounds.
HGH induced losses of abdominal
fat take on added significance from the viewpoint of endogenous (body produced)
HGH release. Obese men make 25% less growth hormone daily and have a pulsatile
GH release that is only 25% as much as a normal weight men!
It is the interaction of insulin
with hGH/ IGF-1 that seems to be responsible for HGHs anti-fat pro-muscle
benefits.
As people age, their cells become
more insulin resistant, frequently accompanied by increased blood insulin levels
at the same time. Yet as we age, not all cells become equally insulin resistant.
Unfortunately, it is the lean body mass cells (muscle and organ tissue) that
primarily become insulin resistant. Fat cells may even increase their insulin
sensitivity!
Since insulin helps fats, sugars
and amino acids from the blood enter cells, this means that our cardiac, nerve
and muscle cells are being starved as we age, meanwhile our fat cells are being
gorged. But insulin doesnt just help food enter our fat cells, it also
directs them to turn that bonanza into body fat!
When HGH levels become adequate
once again, however, it seems to reverse the situation. It directs the action of
insulin toward feeding our precious heart, brain, muscle and other organ cells,
while minimizing insulins direction of food into fat cells. Also, fat cells
have HGH membrane receptors and when adequate HGH activates these receptors it
triggers a process called "lipolysis," breaking down existing fat.
In a very real sense, HGH puts
fat cells on a diet and on fat burning "exercise programs" at the
cellular level!
HGH and brain protection
HGH has also been shown to
benefit the brain and mind in many ways. Scientists have discovered HGH
receptors in different parts of the brain, yet it seemed that the giant HGH
molecule could not pass through the blood brain barrier. Research then
discovered how HGH injections could influence the brain.
When HGH was injected into the
leg, there was a 10-fold increase in HGH levels in the cerebrospinal fluid that
bathes the brain. Researchers also discovered that hGH seems to rebalance
neurotransmitter levels, increasing mood elevating levels of beta-endorphin, one
of the brains chief "feel good" biochemicals, while simultaneously
lowering excessive dopamine levels.
Excessive dopamine produces
feelings of agitation, irritability and quarrelsomeness- the "grumpy old
men" syndrome.
Also, research with both
pituitary damaged HGH deficient adults as well as age related HGH deficient
adults, has consistently shown an antidepressant, mood elevating HGH effect.
Many of the pituitary damaged (or
removed) adults studied in Sweden became withdrawn, depressed, socially
isolated, passive and pessimistic. After HGH treatment, many of these adults
once aging became sociable, friendly, outgoing, zestful people.
The patients treated by Drs.
Chein and Terry also noted improved stress resilience, more positive outlook,
more joy and peace in life.
Neuroscientists have also found
evidence in both humans and animals that HGH may actually reverse the typical
brain shrinkage that occurs with age. While some brain cells die over the course
of a lifetime, it is even more the myriad of dendritic connections between
neurons that disappear with age. It is this ever changing, even renewing (if
were healthy and active) neuronal web that forms the basis for all learning
and memory.
HGH/ IGF-1 seems to protect brain
cells from death under non-ideal conditions. HGH also stimulates various nerve
growth factors in the brain, which in turn cause new dendrites to sprout.
HGH in conclusion
The 1990s have brought the
human race- for the first time in history- the technology to reverse the
generally inevitable and debilitating decline in HGH secretion.
HGH research over 30 years has
demonstrated with a wealth of detail, (way beyond what can even be hinted at in
this short article), that HGH is the hormone of human rejuvenation and
regeneration.
Even the elderly can attain HGH
assisted recovery of lost strength, health and vigor of body and mind.
It is just in time, for the diet
and lifestyles of late 20th century Westerners are almost perfect for producing
catastrophic HGH decline.
Even in late youth and middle
age, our carbohydrate, fat and calorie rich diet promotes insulin excess and
high blood fats, combined with abdominal obesity, which reduces HGH secretion
and effect. Our "couch potato" lifestyle fails to provide the intense
exercise stimulus needed to produce pituitary HGH release. Our quietly
desperate, stressful lives which we can neither flee from nor fight, causes
chronic cortisol excess in many, inhibiting hGH release and promoting hGH
stultifying obesity. Our modern self indulgence and lack of discipline makes it
hard for most people to benefit from the cheapest and most researched method of
increasing both pituitary hGH secretion, as well as cellular sensitivity to hGH-
systematic under-eating, also known as long term caloric food reduction.
Thus HGH injections may provide
the "jump start" our lives need, both to reverse (some of) our
accumulated aging, as well as increase our own HGH production and release, with
consequent rejuvenation and regeneration.
Those wishing more detail on HGH,
as well as an excellent technical HGH bibliography, are referred to the
excellent book; Grow young with hGH by Ronald Klatz and Carol Khan (San
Francisco, Harpers 1997).
ALL INFORMATION IS EDUCATIONAL AND
SHOULD NOT REPLACE THE ADVICE OF
YOUR PHYSICIAN.
The above article is
copyrighted and may not be copied without the written permission of
International Antiaging Systems, Les Autelets Suite A, Sark
GY9 0SF, Channel Islands, UK.
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