Today is Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Hormone Replacement Therapy > HGH
Declines with Aging
The decline of growth hormone and IGF-1 levels with age is directly
associated with many of the symptoms of aging, including cardiovascular
disease, increased body fat, osteoporosis, thin skin, age spots,
wrinkling, gray hair, decreased energy, reduced sexual function
and interest, and other aging archetypal symptoms. Many of these
same age related symptoms have been found in younger adults who
have growth hormone deficiency.
Research over the last 40 years confirms the decline of HGH as we
age in our adult years and unfortunately the decline of HGH production
in our bodies accelerates as we get older. As we continue to get
older each year after the age of 25, our bodies are not stimulating
the regenerating new healthy cells as fast as they are dying off,
and as a net result, aging seems to be the process of our bodies
slowly dying faster than it can replace itself or recover from damage
and stress. The slow dying process in humans accelerates as we continue
to age.
HGH is produced at a rate that peaks during adolescence when accelerated
growth occurs. Growth hormone secretion decreases with age in every
animal species tested thus far. In humans, the amount of growth
hormone after age of 25 to 30 declines about 14% per decade (or
1% to 2% per year), so that total daily growth hormone production
is reduced dramatically with age. In numerical values, we produce
on a daily basis about 500 micrograms of growth hormone at age 20,
200 micrograms at age 40, and 25 micrograms at age 80. At age 40
our growth hormone production is only 40% of what we produced at
age 20. The fall in IGF-1 levels with age is identical to the decline
of growth hormone.
Another research study has shown that by the age of 40, our HGH
production is down to 50% of youthful levels. By the age of 55 it
sinks to 20%, which is not much more than someone in their 80's
can produce. Click below to continue......
Next: Cause of HGH Deficiency