Results of a scientific study carried out at the Stamford University have
shown that growth hormone are not the elixir of eternal youth that many
claim it to be.
The findings of a long-term studied headed by Dr. Hau Liu found that
healthy elderly people who took the synthetic hormone reported small
changes in body composition, but not in body weight or any other
‘clinically important outcomes'.
Many industry experts and consumers have been looking for further
evidence to suggest that growth hormone may hold back, or even reverse
the signs of aging, as previous reports have indicated the possibility
of significant potential in this area.
However, Dr Liu's study even reveals the possibility of undesireable
side affects, including increased rates of soft tissue swelling, joint
pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, together with abnormal breast development
in men.
The findings, which were published in the January 16 edition of the
Annals of International Medicine, under the title The Safety and
Efficacy of Growth Hormone in the Healthy Elderly, will dash the hopes
of many who had thought it might prove to be the ultimate anti-aging
therapy.
"But the scant clinical experience of GH in the healthy elderly suggests
that although GH may minimally alter body composition, it does not
improve other clinically relevant outcomes such as bone density,
cholesterol levels, stamina, and longevity in this population,” said Dr.
Liu.
"And it's associated with high rates of adverse events,” he added.
Growth hormone rates start to slow in the late teens and its reduction
is usually associated with the first physical signs of aging, leading to
the first gray hairs or light wrinkling around the eyes or forehead.
The measureable level of human growth hormone depletes so much that a
man of 60 years-old only produces about one quarter the level of growth
hormone produced by a 20 year-old.
The Rudman study on growth hormones, carried out in 1990, claimed that a
six-month course of growth hormones could cause the skin to thicken,
reducing the effect of facial wrinkling by between 10 – 20 years.
The study was a catalyst, causing many people to take courses of growth
hormones with the aim of achieving anti-aging solutions such as wrinkle
reduction.
However, as further evidence of the side affects the drug can have on
adults, the FDA later introduced rules outlawing the marketing of
synthetic growth hormone for anti-aging purposes. Currently it is only
used treat children with growth deficiencies and adults with metabolism
problems.
Despite this measure, it is still estimated that between 20,000 and
30,000 US adults were using growth hormone for anti-aging purposes in
2004, with a plethora of such products still freely available on the
internet to date.
Dr. Hau hopes that his study findings will warn many elderly adults
about using such products for anti-aging purposes.
"On the basis of available evidence, we cannot recommend growth hormone
use for anti-aging in the healthy elderly," he said.
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