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HGH FAQ:
What is HGH (Human Growth Hormone)?
HGH is produced by the pituitary gland located in the human brain. It is
produced in greatest amounts in childhood and adolescence. At the age of
60, HGH levels decrease by 80% of previous levels in adolescence. HGH
depletion is marked by the usual signs of aging, which includes increased
body fat (especially around the waist), reduced vitality, decreased muscle
mass, and poor general health.
History of HGH:
1920s,
Scientists have known the existence of Human Growth Hormone.
1958, Scientists began to
apply HGH on children that suffer from dwarfism to help them grow
normally. The effects were very obvious. The theory behind the use of HGH
in those days was that the pituitary gland, which secrets HGH, was either
defective or not functioning at all in those children with dwarfism. The
main source of HGH for treatment at that time was extracted from the
pituitary glands of dead people in Africa. It often took thousands of
brains of the dead to produce just a few drops of HGH! Scientists were,
therefore, forced to research alternatives such as synthetic HGH.
1985, Dr. Daniel Rudman, a
Wisconsin internal medicine scholar, first published in the Journal of
American Geriatrics Society a brand new theory about aging based on his
many years of extensive clinical experiments and research. He indicated
clearly in the article that human aging is a result of HGH deficiency, and
is not the commonly accepted view of "inevitable natural phenomenon." He
further concluded that by stimulating the pituitary gland with HGH, the
gland could be made to recover its function to secrete HGH again. This
discovery not only stops the aging process but also turns back the
biological clock to its adolescent stage. 1985, Genentech succeeded in
producing large quantities of HGH through microbiological
1985, Genentech succeeded
in producing large quantities of HGH through microbiological replication
by inserting human DNA into microorganisms. Normal HGH has 191 amino
acids, whereas Genentech's HGH had only 190.
1986, Eli Lilly was able
to produce HGH with 191 amino acids by using bio-engineering of the genes.
1990, Dr. Daniel Rudman
published another article in the New England Journal of Medicine that
shocked the entire medical fields. This article became a milestone in
anti-aging treatment with the clinical trials of HGH. He selected 12
males, aged from 61 to 81 for treatment. After 6 months' use of HGH, their
fat was reduced by 14.4%; skin thickness increased 7.11%; bone density
increased 1.6%; liver improved 19% and spleen improved 17%. Dr. Rudman
concluded that these 12 old men had become younger by 20 years both
physically and psychologically.
1992, Encouraged by Dr.
Rudman's HGH theory, the National Institute on Aging began to carry out
nine clinical experiments that took 5 years to complete. The results,
unprecedented and far-reaching in influence, proved once again that Dr.
Rudman's theory was correct.
1996, Dr. Rudman had over
800 HGH patients, including movie stars, corporate executives, other
renowned doctors, specialists and scholars. In his medical reports, he
indicated that among thousands of patients, there was not even one single
case of failure.
Within the past ten years, there were more
than 30,000 case reports, the results were very encouraging.
1996, FDA finally approved
the usage of HGH in the treatment of both children and adults for
suffering from growth hormone deficiency. It is now recognized in the
medical fields that HGH is the major hormone among all hormones. It guides
and promotes the release and secretion of other hormones.
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