THE ULTIMATE BABY-BOOMER BUMMER
It’s
been called the middle-age spread and the middle-age blimp-out. But
whatever it’s called, it’s a physical reality for 80 million
middle-age adults. Officially, medical researchers call this condition
the somatopause (sa-mot-a-pause).
SYMPTOMS OF THE SAGING SOMATOPAUSE
Are you middle-age and experiencing weight-gain, energy decline,
and loss of muscle? Are lab reports showing bad cholesterol going
up and good cholesterol going down? These are all symptoms of the
somatopause that typically begins in the 30s.
Medical researchers report that the somatopause is related directly
to the decline of HGH growth hormone (a natural substance produced
by the body during aging).
HORMONE REPLACEMENT
HGH growth hormone replacement therapy has proven successful in many
anti-aging research experiments. It has produced a 14 percent drop
in body fat and an 8 percent gain in muscle. Researchers also report
improvements in the skin, bone density, and cholesterol.
These remarkable clinical results are not the best case outcome.
These are the typical, average results. So you can see why many are
calling HGH therapy the fountain of youth.
Initially, HGH growth hormone injections were given to children with
clinical stature growth problems to help them grow normally. Today,
there are 15,000 children being treated with growth hormone.
When given to adults, growth hormone replacement therapy does not
make adults grow taller, but it does reverse several clinical measures
of the somatopause.
CELEBRITY ANTI-AGING DRUG OF CHOICE
It’s widely reported that several well-known actors take HGH
growth hormone injections for its anti-aging, youth rejuvenating properties.
HGH has been banned for athletes because of its ability to improve
performance.
While there’s research to show serious side-effects are possible
with this therapy, everyone knows instinctively -- when you inject
something into your bloodstream that costs $1,500 a month (that can
put on muscle like steroids and pull 30 lbs of body fat off a 200
lb person), it doesn’t take rocket science to figure there’s
a price to pay in the long run.
Hold on! There’s a better way to get the benefits of increasing
HGH growth hormone. And it’s 100% natural and it doesn’t
cost a dime — just a little of your time.
THE NATURAL CURE FOR THE SOMATOPAUSE
There are two cures for the middle-age somatopause — HGH growth
hormone injections, or the natural method, anaerobic exercise.
HGH growth hormone can be increased 530% with anaerobic exercise
— the short-burst, get-you-out-of-breath quickly, sprinting
types of exercise. You don’t have to spend all day in the gym,
jog for hours, or starve yourself. But it does require high-intensity
exercise for short periods.
Now, before you go out and run, cycle, or swim a few 100 meter sprints
or power-walk some steep hills, it’s important to note that
anaerobic exercise is the most productive form of exercise (from the
HGH anti-aging standpoint), but it’s also the most dangerous.
Even young athletes need to warm-up, and progressively build intensity
levels or risk pulling hamstrings, calf muscles, and Achilles tears.
Middle-age adults need to slowly ease into high-intensity anaerobic
exercise. And for some reason, many of my X-jock friends believe that
this warning does not apply to them. Even well-conditioned athletes,
who can jog for miles, need a progressive, six to eight week buildup
period.
Adults can successfully add anaerobic fitness
training to their fitness program, but there needs to be a slow,
progressive buildup period. And physician clearance should be obtained
before beginning any type of high-intensity training.
Phil Campbell is the author of "
Ready,
Set, Go! Synergy Fitness for Time-Crunched Adults"
Pristine Publishers Inc. USA. A Free Newsletter
on this topic at www.readysetgofitness.com
Source: National
Library of Medicine
-
Savine, Sonksen. (2000). “Growth
Hormone—hormone replacement for the
somatopause.” Horm Res 2000:53
Suppl 3:37-41. PMID: 10971102.
-
Pritzlaff. (2000).
“Catecholamine release, growth hormone
secretion, and energy expenditure during
exercise vs. recovery in men."
J Appl Physiol 2000 Sep;89(3):937-46. PMID:
10956336.
-
Pritzlaff. (1999). “Impact
of acute exercise intensity on pulsatile
growth hormone release in men.”
J Appl Physiol. Aug;87(2):498-504. PMID:
10444604.

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