Guest guest Posted September 23, 2005 Report Share Posted September 23, 2005 Hello, I was wondering if you had to show your doctor any studies in order to get prescribed the HGH and whether your HMO covers it. I think I understood you are taking the HGH on the Experimental list. Thanks, Du Pre Website: http://www.angelfire.com/poetry/soareagle/index.html " By words the mind is winged. " Aristophanes Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2008 Report Share Posted October 25, 2008 Duncan, what would we do without you here. I read that Suzanne Somers gives herself (only once daily) of 0.08 whatever and ALSO uses several topical hormones as well according to her IGF-1 levels and you were saying that the HGH precursors would make all your hormones fall into place without supplementing any of them. She is followed closely by a TOP NOTCH Doctor too. So I thought, " what a great idea " and is closely monitored. Bonnie _____ From: candidiasis [mailto:candidiasis ] On Behalf Of Duncan Crow Sent: October 25, 2008 2:11 AM candidiasis Subject: Re: HGH precursors Bonnie, HGH injections have about the same effect as HGH precursors if they are done right, but precursors are better. HGH injections are tricky because you'd have to take about 4 daily as a woman to approximate the natural pulsatile release that precursors increase, and because the doctor is guessing at your dose, which overrides your natural limiting factor for HGH release, you never know if you're getting 100%, 50%, 200%, 400% etc of what you'd produce naturally at 22. Injections NOT given in such a manner have to give a lot more than the 100% to AVERAGE the 100% over the span between injections; if injections were given daily for example, 400% of your normal pulsatile dose would be needed at once, each time. This results in side effects. Early on this was magnified by the shoddy technique of giving them only once or twice weekly. The classic Arnold Schwarzenegger chin and knuckles are testament to this effect. Many doctors will not prescribe HGH injections at all because of that, and also because this kind of GH is not HGH (not human) but an exudate produced by genetically-modified e.coli bacteria. They have reason to be suspicious; early experiments that used monkey GH (simian GH= SGH?) in HGH-deficient children produced skeletal defects so they had to stop the program. Be that as it may, if you choose the injections be prepared to pay about $1400-$2500 per month for them vs $100 to increase your own. They aren't cheap, and they aren't better than your own HGH; in fact some doctors also cite a relative lack of conversion by your body to the active growth hormone IGF-1, while your body has no trouble converting your own HGH. Cross posting this to the coconut oil list might be a good idea; all of it is verifiable. all good, Duncan > > Duncan: > > > > Did you say that HGH precursors were superior in some way to the Injections? > > > > Bonnie > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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