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  Human Growth Hormone - HGH
Where it comes from, what it does Human
Growth Hormone is secreted by the pituitary, a tiny body hanging from the brain
and located in the sella turcica, a small depression in the sphenoid bone at the
base of the skull.
In spite of its small size the pituitary weighs less than a fiftieth of
an ounce it has been called the master gland because of its regulatory
effect over other glands. One section (the anterior pituitary) produces six
major hormones that control body structures and functions from the thyroid to
the ovaries and testes.
One pituitary hormone human growth hormone (HGH) is
responsible for significantly more than maintaining growth during childhood and
adolescence. Throughout life, it affects just about every cell in the body and
has a major effect on how we feel, act, and look. HGH can turn fat deposits into
energy HGH is able to promote the generation of energy from fat, rather than
from carbohydrates and proteins. To do so, it breaks down fat deposits,
releasing the fatty acids they contain. HGH then stimulates the conversion of
the fatty acids to acetyl coenzyme A which is responsible for the production of
energy. The process is sparing of both carbohydrates and proteins. HGH helps
build muscles A continuous supply of protein is needed to keep muscles in shape.
To build more muscle, it takes more protein. That's where HGH comes in:
HGH increases the cell's content of amino acids, the raw materials cells use to
produce protein. It does this by increasing the ability of the amino acids to
penetrate the protective membrane that surrounds the cell.
HGH increases the cell's ability to turn amino acids into proteins. HGH
stimulates the production of the RNA and ribosomes that form polysomes, the
"machinery" the cells use to assemble amino acids into protein
molecules. HGH also acts to prevent the breakdown of proteins and amino acids.
Bones, cartilage, and skin HGH stimulates the liver, and possibly the kidneys,
to increase the production of somatomedin. Somatomedin, in turn, promotes the
deposition of chondroitin and collagen, essential to the formation and
maintenance of healthy bones and cartilage.
Old, wrinkled-looking skin is thin skin. It happens with age. It is believed
that the effect that HGH has on the production of somatomedin is also
responsible for HGH's ability to produce thicker, less wrinkled, younger-looking
skin.
While there is no scientific evidence that HGH will increase the number of years
you may live, there is plenty of evidence that HGH can make those years healthier and more enjoyable.
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