Anti-Aging Therapeutics Volume XV. A4M American Academy

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Anti-Aging Therapeutics Volume XV - A4M American Academy страница 4

Автор:
Жанр:
Серия:
Издательство:
Anti-Aging Therapeutics Volume XV - A4M American Academy

Скачать книгу

purpose. A4M is advised that one of the authors of the JAMA commentary stated to United Press International (UPI) in reference to the statute, "They basically put in language that made it crystal clear that it is illegal to use growth hormone as an anti-aging intervention".10 This is a very odd and A4M believes, an incorrect statement, considering the fact that when the law was written, there were no anti-aging doctors or profession in existence. In fact, the anti-aging medical profession did not even exist until five years after the 1988 statute was enacted. The concept of HGH s an anti-aging drug did not exist until the problem of Rudman’s study.12

      The Anabolic Steroid Control Act never intended to infringe upon physician freedoms to prescribe hormone therapy when clinically appropriate. It was specifically intended to prevent steroid trafficking in professional sports. Whereas education should have been a primary goal in implementing the Anabolic Steroid Control Act, instead an enforcement environment that granted limitless power unto itself was created. A multi-million dollar industry of drug testing was born and subsequently flourishes.

      DISINFORMATION CAMPAIGN

      History is replete with examples of medical pioneers whose innovations and foresight were trivialized, ignored, challenged, or violently opposed by the establishment, only to ultimately become accepted by society at-large. Leopold Auenbrugger was ridiculed for percussing and auscultating his patients' chests; Ignaz Semmelweiss' recommendation for doctors to wash their hands before each patient landed him in a mental asylum; and more recently, cardiologists denied Nathan Pritikin's program for dietary modification to modulate cardiovascular risk until after his death. Given time and objective, undeniable evidence, scientific truths are ultimately borne out. In the words of Dr. Augenbrugger, "It has always been the fate of those who have illustrated the arts and sciences by their discoveries to be beset by envy, malice, hatred, destruction, and calumny."

      Misguided Attacks on HRT

      Statute6 21 U.S.C. § 333(e), a provision of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA), supports the use of hormone replacement in mature, clinically GH-deficient adults as both treatment of a disease and a medically authorized use granted by the FDA. Any implication that the statute was intended to target medical hormone replacement by ethical doctors in the new and emerging field of anti-aging medicine is therefore incorrect and misleading.

      To obfuscate the truth, critics of the anti-aging medical science offer deliberately misleading claims concerning HRT with the specific and ultimate goal to severely restrict the use of hormone therapy. Most notably, the JAMA commentary4 purported to address the legality of Human Growth Hormone (HGH, GH) treatment by physicians for growth hormone deficient (GHD) patients. The commentary, however, was flawed by a number of incorrect, misplaced references and studies, and multiple basic scientific errors.

      In the May-June 2009 issue1 of the prestigious Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, an international journal integrating experimental, clinical, and social studies on aging published by Elsevier, founder and Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Imre Zs.-Nagy expresses his opinions on the use of the HGH as an anti-aging medical intervention. Prof. Dr. Nagy’s Editorial points out the main clinical results of HGH replacement therapy (hGHRT) in light of the “Membrane Hypothesis of Aging” (MHA), which he submits as offering a solid basis for the interpretation of the observed beneficial effects of HGH. Prof. Dr. Zs.-Nagy’s profile of the sharp and protracted conflict of views between the gerontological establishment and the A4M exposes a “disregard by certain individuals bearing some of the most prestigious affiliations in the gerontological establishment, for truth, academic integrity, and scientific professionalism.” Dr. Zs.-Nagy submits that: “[T]he gerontological elite has … sought to obfuscate the facts of the anti-aging medical movement. I submit that the reason for this is nothing less than an abject fear by the gerontological elite to avert their loss of control, power, prestige, and position in the multi-billion dollar industry of gerontological medicine. “’

      Elite athlete and professional sports/medical writer Monica Mollica observes11 that: “For reasons that are not readily apparent, there appears to be a conservative political movement that opposes the use of testosterone in older men. Continuing, Ms. Mollica observes that: “The political climate is working against testosterone replacement therapy in older men despite overwhelming scientific data supporting this appropriate pursuit as a strategy to prolong healthy longevity.”

      `

      HGH

      On July 5, 1990, Daniel Rudman, M.D., a pioneer researcher in the use of HGH, and his colleagues at the Medical College of Wisconsin made medical history with an article12 in the New England Journal of Medicine. It detailed the first clinical trial of elderly men on HGH therapy, which compared the effects of 6 months of HGH injections on 12 men, aged 61 to 81 years, with an age-matched control group. The result made headlines all over the world. Those taking the hormone injections gained an average of 8.8% in lean body mass and lost 14% fat, without diets or exercise. Their skin became thicker and firmer and the lumbar bones of the spine increased. In other words, HGH had virtually turned their flabby, frail, bodies into their sleeker, stronger, younger selves. In language rarely used in conservative medical journals, the researchers wrote: “The effects of 6 months of HGH on lean body mass and adipose-tissue mass were equivalent in magnitude to the changes incurred during 10 to 20 years of aging.”

      HGH is one of the most studied compounds in medicine with almost 100,000 journal references currently in PubMed. The majority of these data demonstrate the positive benefits of HGH therapy in multi-year studies, well beyond the typical 6-12 month study protocols. 13,14

      Growth hormone replacement therapy has been shown to improve muscle strength and mobility, cognitive function, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, immune function, body composition, obesity and sarcopenia, fibromyalgia, Crohn's disease, other illnesses, and quality of life issues.15,16,17,18,19,20,21

      Low GH22 is associated with decreased longevity in humans, with more than 20 years decreased lifespan with low GH.23 Older men with higher IGF-1 do not show the same decrease in lean body mass and increase in fat mass. “GH determines life’s potential.”24 Childhood or adult GH deficiency is associated with 2-3 times increase in mortality.25

      Low GH22 and its downstream hormone IGF-1 are associated with poor health and quality of life outcomes. The June 2012 issue26 of The Journals of Gerontology: Series A published a series of articles documenting the clinical benefits of IGF-1. Of note, Higashi et al27 provide “a comprehensive update on IGF-1's ability to modulate vascular oxidative stress and to limit atherogenesis and the vascular complications of aging.” Further, Ungvari et al28 cite the “cardiovascular protective effects of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1” [to] “[provide] a landscape of molecular mechanisms involved in cardiovascular alterations in patients and animal models with … adult-onset IGF-1 deficiency,” submitting that: “Microvascular protection conferred by endocrine and paracrine IGF-1 signaling” suggest “its implications for the pathophysiology of cardiac failure and vascular cognitive impairment, and the role of impaired cellular stress resistance in cardiovascular aging.”

      The “2013 ACCF/AHA Guideline for the Management of Heart Failure: A Report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines” reports29 that treating GH deficiency in patients with chronic heart failure beneficially affects the primary endpoint of peak oxygen consumption, which showed “remarkable” increases of 7.1 ml/kg/m in GH-treated patients, as compared to a decrease of 1.8 ml/kg/m among control subjects. In that left ejection fraction rose by 10% in the GH-treated patients (declined 2% in controls); with a greater effect on left ventricular and systolic volume index of -22 ml/m2

Скачать книгу