GenF20 Plus

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Can HGH therapy work for treatment of secondary amenorrhea?

Question by kbw205: Can HGH therapy work for treatment of secondary amenorrhea?
I have had amenorrhea(lack of period) for about a year and a half. I have read that HGH (human growth hormone) treatments can help with a wide variety of health issues ie. high blood pressure, bone density, menstrual cycles, hair skin and nails. I was wondering if anyone new a little more first hand about the possibility of using HGH as a treatment.


Best answer:

Answer by katrina
It can help with many concerns...and I've actually been recently researching HGH supplements for an MD who's office I work at. (I'm a natural health practitioner). LOTS of them out there...some good, some over the top with questionable ingredients. I've found one so far that looks good...you are more than welcome to email me for the name as not sure how that works on this site. Otherwise start doing some research and read ingredients and what they do etc. There are also herbs that work to bring on periods as well Not sure what you've tried so far...but another safe option.



What do you think? Answer below!

2 comments:

  1. The problem with so-called HGH supplements is that true HGH molecules are too large to be absorbed into the bloodstream, so actual HGH must be administered intravenously by a qualified medical professional. It is hard to find one who will use HGH for off-label use for things such as you have listed. HGH is intended to be used for drawfism, usually in still developing children

    Many of the HGH supplements are sold as HGH precursors or HGH stimulators. If consider most of those products to be either outright scams with virtually worthless ingredients or else close to scams with limited actual benefits. Virtually all of the reported benefits and studies referred to in the adverstising for such products comes from actual injected HGH and not from supplementation. There have also been some concerns raised over long term use of actual HGH and studies on safey for HGH have been almost non-existant. In addition to oral supplementation, some companies market hugely expensive sythethic HGH injections, whose effectiveness is questionable and whose safety is even more questionable due to it being an unnatural synthetic. The safety of any supplemental so-called HGH products would depend on an assessment of what ingredients it contained and whether or not you could trust the company to be honest and practice good quality manufacturing.

    From what I have found when I have researched them, none are able to stimulate HGH production anywhere close to what you will get from regular exercise. In some instances, perhaps the product is actually safe and you might get a bit more benefit from using it in combination with exercise, but exercise will be where most of the benefit comes from.

    All the best!

    ReplyDelete
  2. talk to your doc

    ReplyDelete