新建网页 1
GH, is a peptide produced by the pituitary which enters circulation and works
in multiple tissues of the body via the GH receptor. The activated GH receptor
provides some effects directly and other effects indirectly by stimulating
production of IGF-1. Some increase in GH may be achieved naturally by means of
exercise; larger increases can be achieved by injection.
Injectable GH is typically provided as lyophilized powder in vials.
Any injectable GH product should be identical with natural GH, which has 191
amino acids. Some products however are a cheaper analog with 192 amino acids.
These products can cause adverse immune response and should not be used.
Desirable Effects of Growth Hormone Use
Growth hormone use can increase muscular size, increase metabolism, reduce fat
mass, reduce elevated blood pressure, and improve healing, strength, natural
testosterone production, recovery from training, sleep, and perceived quality of
life. In those experiencing effects of aging, it can improve appearance of skin,
reduce or reverse osteoporosis, and appear to partially reverse some signs of
aging.
All the above are potentials rather than guarantees.
Possible and Likely Adverse Side Effects of Growth Hormone Use
Growth hormone can be used with good safety. However, there are possible adverse
side effects, particularly with high dosing and especially with chronic high
dosing.
GH use can cause insulin resistance, increase serum free fatty acids, and
increase TNF-alpha, lipoprotein (a), and fibrinogen. These effects can act
towards increasing cardiovascular risk.
Additionally, growth hormone use can cause carpal tunnel syndrome, tarsal tunnel
syndrome, peripheral neuropathy, compressive myelopathy, water retention, and
sleep apnea. Acne can be promoted. Prolactin can be increased. In women,
hirsutism, menstrual irregularities or endometrial hyperplasia can occur.
Of these, the most consistent effect is insulin resistance. This can essentially
be guaranteed at sustained higher doses.
Other possible adverse side effects of GH use include increase in skin tags,
imbalance in phosphate levels, hypervitaminosis D, promotion of arthritis, and
growth promotion of existing cancers or polyps.
Incidentally, while increase in skin tags could seem a minor thing, there’s a
strong correlation between having more than 3 skin tags and having increased
risk of colon polyps. Gaining skin tags, then, may be a warning sign.
Long term GH use giving levels comparable to those occurring naturally in
acromegaly may yield the adverse consequences of that condition. These include
diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, heart enlargement, joint thickening,
arthritis, coarse facial features, enlargement of hands and feet, thick skin,
darkened skin, chronic fatigue, impotence, increased rate of death from
cardiovascular disease, increased rate of death from cancer, and a two to four
times overall increase in mortality rate. Of course, in acromegaly high GH
levels are experienced for years or decades on end, and not every person with
the condition suffers all these effects.
With all this said, when used in moderation GH’s track record for safety in
bodybuilding is good. Problems usually are limited to worsening of insulin
sensitivity and, commonly, carpal tunnel syndrome or other neuropathies which
usually are reversible on cessation of use.
Extreme use, especially over an extended period, likely carries significant
health harms and risks.
Pharmacology of Growth Hormone
What does growth hormone itself do at higher doses, exclusive of what may happen
from released IGF-1?
In skeletal muscle, GH at supraphysiological doses interferes with insulin
signaling, decreases glucose uptake, increases fatty acid uptake, and increases
basal rate of lipid oxidation (fat burning).
Overall, the effects promote anabolism and a metabolic shift towards fat-burning
over glucose-burning.
At supraphysiological doses, GH also increases lipid storage within muscle
cells, which is an adverse effect, yielding to some extent lipotoxicity. (Only
adipose cells are capable of storing substantial amounts of lipids without
self-harm and metabolic impairment.)
At normal GH levels, the story in muscle is largely the same as above, except
that normal GH levels actually support normal insulin signaling, rather than
impair it, and do not cause abnormal lipid storage.
In adipose tissue, GH increases lipolysis, decreases lipogenesis, decreases
glucose uptake, and decreases local activity of corticosteroids by
downregulating 11βHSD1. Some of the increase in lipolysis appears to be from
upregulating adipose β2 and β3 receptors.
All this helps in fat loss or to help in partitioning nutrients towards muscle
gain. Additionally, the increase in serum free fatty acids produced from
increased lipolysis appears to be GH’s mechanism for increasing muscle
anabolism. When this increase in free fatty acids is blocked, GH no longer
increases muscle anabolism.
In the liver, GH stimulates conversion of glycogen to glucose, impairs insulin
sensitivity and thereby reduces glucose uptake, increases uptake of
triglycerides, increases storage of triglycerides, and increases production of
VLDL (“bad cholesterol.”)
In both muscle tissue and the liver, GH also stimulates production of IGF-1.
IGF-1 produced by the liver provides systemic effect; the effect of IGF-1
produced in muscle is thought to be mostly local.
Pharmacology of IGF-1
In skeletal muscle, IGF-1 stimulates glucose uptake, the opposite effect of
growth hormone itself. It also promotes protein synthesis, reduces catabolism,
decreases breakdown of glycogen, and can increase the number of nuclei per
muscle cell by promoting myoblast proliferation and fusion.
That last part is how GH or IGF-1 use can profoundly affect potential for
muscular size.
In adipose tissue, IGF-1 has relatively little effect. It does not appear to
affect lipolysis or lipogenesis. While IGF-1 alone can aid leanness, this is
principally from effect on muscle and overall metabolism, not from direct effect
on fat cells.
In the liver, IGF-1 has rather little effect as the liver has few IGF-1
receptors. The liver’s principal involvement with IGF-1 is as a producer of it
in response to GH, rather than as a responder to it.
Storage, Reconstitution, and Injection of GH
Unreconstituted growth hormone vials should generally be stored under
refrigeration, but may be kept at room temperature for short periods, for
example while shipping.
Vials of GH are reconstituted with a convenient amount of bacteriostatic,
sterile, or sterile saline water for injection. For example, an 8 IU vial can
conveniently be diluted with 0.8 mL or 1.0 mL of water. In the first instance,
each 0.1 mL, which is marked “10 IU” on an insulin syringe, will provide 1 IU of
GH. This would allow easy calculation for any injection amount.
Other amounts of water, such as 1.0 mL, may also be used.
A problem with using small amounts of water can be that after drawing everything
possible from a vial, a substantial percentage of it may remain, causing
significant loss of GH. The loss can be about 10%.
One solution is this: Reconstitute your next vial by first adding the needed
amount of water to the near-empty vial, then drawing it, and finally adding to
the new vial. This will transfer nearly all the remaining GH to the new vial.
There is no need to worry about resulting dosing error: over time everything
averages out.
If that method does not appeal, another solution is to use a larger amount of
water for reconstitution. For example, 2.4 mL of water can be used for an 8 IU
vial. Each 0.3 mL of injection then provides 1 IU. And if the last 0.1 mL cannot
be drawn from the vial, this is them only about a 4% loss. That’s still a waste,
but it’s much reduced compared to reconstituting with less water.
Reconstituted vials should always be refrigerated, although a vial accidentally
left at room temperature for a single day need not be discarded, if completely
confident about its sterility.
Injection is typically with an insulin syringe, and is intramuscular (IM) or
subcutaneous. As personal opinion IM is better as the delivery is a little
faster, better matching natural release of GH. Intravenous injection provides
even faster delivery of course but as personal opinion is not worth the added
trouble. If personally finding it convenient, though, it’s another option.
Redness and Swelling in Response to GH Injection?
Redness and swelling should not occur at a growth hormone injection site. That
said, with legitimate, sterile GH a very small percentage of injections will go
wrong in some unknown way, temporarily causing these effects. A reason for this
could be the needle picking up some skin bacteria in the injection process,
despite good procedure. If the redness or swelling subsides, a single such event
should cause no suspicion of the product.
If it’s a known-good product yet such responses occur twice in a row, the vial
should be discarded. It may have become contaminated.
If it’s a product which is new to you and unproven, then the most likely
explanation is that it is a cheap, 192 amino acid product which no one should
use. Continued use could result in developing immune response not only to the
bad product, but to genuine GH as well.
Dosing of GH in Anabolic Steroid Cycles
For a high degree of improvement in muscle mass and/or fat loss in anabolic
steroid cycles, 4 IU per day is a gold standard amount in my opinion. However,
not all can tolerate this.
Many need to limit growth hormone dosing to no more than 2 IU per day to avoid
serious side effects, particularly carpal tunnel syndrome and other
neuropathies. At this use level, dosing is preferably divided, but it’s a fine
point. If individual preference calls for injecting GH only once per day, that
will work fine.
When using about 4 IU per day, it becomes very preferable to divide it into at
least two doses per day. Even further division of the dose may be better yet.
What about going over 4 IU/day? If there’s still room to improve results by
increasing anabolic steroid dose, I think this is a safer and better path than
taking GH usage beyond this amount. In fact, I recommend first optimizing the
anabolic steroid component of a stack before exceeding the 2 IU/day level.
It may also be better, rather than going past this amount of GH, to add IGF-1 to
it rather than to add more GH. Not only to avoid further worsening of insulin
sensitivity, but for greater effectiveness.
At the other end of the spectrum, GH is sometimes used at lower dosing such as 1
IU/day or 2 IU every other day. Younger lifters will find such a use to be a
waste: they will experience little benefit from it. For older lifters, however,
such dosing can provide noticeable benefit, as their natural GH production is
lower. Reasons to choose low dosing usually would be cost or conservatism rather
than intolerance of midrange dosing.
Dosing of GH for Quality of Life Improvement
Where an older person wishes benefits of GH such as improved skin appearance, a
leaner set-point, and improved feeling of vitality, a good dosage range is about
7-10 IU per week, with individual doses preferably being about 1-2 IU at a time.
Of course some use more, but I’m not convinced that over time this won’t be
counterproductive.
Dosing of GH for Longevity
By far the preponderance of evidence is that the reduction in growth hormone
that occurs with age actually enhances longevity, and that taking GH in amounts
causing supraphysiological levels will more likely shorten life rather than
extend it.
I suggest that if wishing to at least maintain the same longevity but with
improved quality of life, then certain things should be closely monitored. Serum
IGF-1 most likely should be kept within the normal range, and fasting glucose,
oral glucose tolerance, lipoprotein(a), fibrinogen, and water retention should
be monitored. If none of these are adversely affected at all by the GH
administration, there’s reasonable hope I think that expected lifespan won’t be
shortened, or if so, only minimally.
If any parameters are adversely affected, my suggestion would be to reduce the
dose if longevity is a key goal.
Cycling of GH
For younger users, growth hormone use can effectively be reserved for anabolic
steroid cycles or for anabolic steroid cycles plus the first few weeks of PCT,
with all other weeks of the year being “off.”
For older users, higher dose use of GH for serious anabolic or fat loss results
should be done within anabolic steroid cycles, but additional lighter use in
some off weeks may be an aid.
For those who do not use anabolic steroids but wish to use GH for enhanced
quality of life, I don’t have specific cycling recommendations. As opinion, it
is probably better to cycle GH than to use it continually. I would avoid
allowing obvious physical decline between cycles. It could be reasonable to
alternate moderate-dose use with maintenance low-dose use. This is an unstudied
area.
IGF-1 Instead of GH, or with GH?
Some do obtain good results using IGF-1 without GH, but some don’t.
Additionally, IGF-1 administration suppresses natural GH production, and as
discussed above, GH has some beneficial anabolic and fat loss actions which
IGF-1 does not have.
If considering IGF-1, I recommend supporting it with GH.
Why Do Some Combine Insulin with GH in Mass Gain Cycles?
GH impairs insulin sensitivity, which in turn impairs muscle building. Even with
this adverse effect there’s still benefit to GH, but not as much as there can
be. Injected insulin in a way compensates for impaired insulin sensitivity, but
unfortunately it worsens it even more.
Increase of GH by Administration of Peptides
GH may also be increased by administration of GHRP’s such as GHRP-2, GHRP-6,
hexarelin, or ipamorelin; or administration of GHRH’s such as Mod GRF 1-29 or
CJC-1295.
Nutritional supplements purporting to increase GH generally do not do so, or
don’t do so to a useful extent.
Exercise, proper nutrition, and good sleep improve GH production. Excess bodyfat
decreases it – a cruel fact for the overfat, as reduced GH makes fat loss
harder.
Summary
Normal growth hormone levels are necessary for normal health. Elevated GH levels
can promote anabolism and fat loss, but may have health risks. Typical dosing in
bodybuilding is 2-4 IU per day, typically used concurrently with steroid cycles.
Higher doses are used by some. Carpal tunnel syndrome and other neuropathies are
the most common adverse side effects. Chronic supraphysiological dosing of GH
probably shortens lifespan rather than increases it. Moderate GH using can
improve quality of life for older persons and judicious use may be neutral in
effect on lifespan, while improving its quality. GH levels may be increased by
injecting GH itself, or by injecting peptides which increase natural production
of GH. For means of doing this, see profiles on GHRP-6 and Mod GRF 1-29.
This product was added to our catalog on Saturday 25 July, 2020.