HGH therapy, is it really all they claim to be?
HGH Therapy Comments Off
There has been some exceptional advancement in HGH (human growth hormone) replacement therapy over the last 100 years. Originally the growth hormones were removed from cadavers in morgues to then be inserted into the patient who required the HGH supplements. This type of replacement therapy was not the greatest and the end results accumulated many different problematic side effects for the unfortunate recipient of the hormones. HGH therapy still uses the direct injection method in many of the case studies and research trials. Hormone injections are considered to be dangerous because of the number of side effect and many governments around the world still have restricted control or a complete ban on this type of therapy. Injections are not the only source of steroid supplement though they do lay claim to being the most direct method of application.
Other application methods take the appearance of tablets and the latest in HGH oral or nasal sprays. These kinds of therapy applications are normally easily accessible online and are inexpensive compared to the injections that HGH therapy clinics administer. The steroid injections may cost around the US$50 mark per injection, and injections may be required multiple times each day. This cost can quickly add up to an insurmountable price tag by the end of the therapy in relation to other available products. When each product claims to achieve the same result as the other marketed products, then why would we through money away on a therapy method that is likely 10 times the price of any other but still achieves the same physiological changes? Consumers of the products must weigh up this choice and the wary buyer will ultimately purchase the least expensive therapy method with the lowest chances of contracting side effects.
The side effects are various in natures, ranging from modifiable to non modifiable effects that will cause problems with the applicant. Due to a boost in muscle mass over a short period of time, common side effects are nerve pinching and discomfort along with headaches and pressure on the optic nerves. Although the increase in bone density has helped many patients with osteoporosis, excessive HGH ingestion can lead disproportionate bone growth. This may result in pituitary gigantism of long bones and the jaw. Muscle strengthening is often a physiological change in HGH therapy patients however with irregular or extreme HGH doses this strength can be reversed and lost quickly. The substituted hormones can have a negative effect on the natural production of our own HGH release. The body may become used to having the hormone supplemented and then shuts down its own production. High-quality HGH therapy
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@ May 15, 2009
