HGH Scams
HGH Scam: Is it real?
You might be a bit skeptical about the Human Growth Hormone after receiving snail mails and email messages about how it can cure almost everything that ails you from wrinkles to Alzheimer’s. Who is to blame you for your skepticism? You may have heard more than just one HGH scam going around. A lot of other people are also sick of the spam that piles up in their inboxes that claim that they have the purest form of HGH and HGH energizers that only stimulates the body to release more human growth hormone on its own.
What also adds to your skepticism is that these email messages and offers come from virtually unknown companies that are making extraordinary claims about the safety and the effectiveness of their products. They all claim to “be backed up with many years of medical research” but do not really tell you what the research was and where it was done, if it was done at all. A lot of websites that advertise HGH often namedrop known doctors whom they really have no working connection with, like the late Dr Daniel Rudman who was the first to study HGH and theorize that it is a good treatment for aging. However, he was not able to specify how much is needed to stimulate the body to supplement it in order to get the desired anti-aging results. So these outrageous products often fall flat on their faces and the hard part is, consumers find it hard to tell which ones are HGH scams and which are not.
It might help you to remember that it is true that some natural and artificial substances in fact trigger the production of the human growth hormone. These substances include the amino acid arginine, which is the building block of protein, which builds and repairs muscles in the body. This amino acid is effective if and only if administered by injection. So, if you are suffering the premature effects of aging, or are deficient in HGH for your age, then your best way to go would be to take injectable human growth hormone for a certain period of time, as prescribed by the doctor.
Second thing to consider is that there are no clinical back ups to support the lofty claims of these “super HGH” sold online or anywhere else. Ingestible products like pills, oral or mouth sprays and topical HGH like creams and gels contain no or very little HGH to make any huge difference. Also, the digestive process will break down any traces of amino acids present in the dose so it loses potency before the body can absorb it.
Third, there are real human growth hormone enhancers and these are called secretagogues. However, this substance is not widely available because it is still in the research and testing stage.
It is illegal to import HGH and it is illegal to sell it to minors and dispense it without a prescription. So it is practically easy to understand that any over-the-counter or online HGH product seem a bit fraudulent. Most of the time, these are only HGH scams and that the HGH in them come from cows and only have an effect on other cows and not on humans.
Always remember these key points before you ever give out your card number to any HGH selling website. It is always better to be safe than sorry.

