Newguyaround
Iron
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2019
- Posts
- 225
- Reputation
- 205
"pubescent. A pubescent girl or boy is a young person who's just reached the age of puberty, or sexual maturity. ... Pubescent girls and boys are at an in-between stage in their lives, no longer little kids, but not yet grownups."
And Intermittent fasting causes even more GH increase. Direct GH influences bone growth, not average GH levels. IGF-1 levels would matter more in terms of indirect bone growth (which we are still assuming it's a real thing)
show me the part where it says HGH without AI doesn't cause bone growth
"
"
- the products of the GH-IGF-1 system induce proliferation without maturation of the growth plate and thus induce linear skeletal growth.
- the action of the thyroid hormone axis is via an active metabolite that enters target cells and signals a nuclear receptor to stimulate both proliferation and maturation of the growth plate. Increased amounts of the active steroid hormone metabolite promote proliferation and maturation of the growth plate
Normal levels of GH, not accelrated.
Feel free to read https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8950623#targetText=One of the largest and,mg/kg per week).
This was a REAL STUDY Ddone with REAL HGH.
If you don't thin this is cope, ask @x30001 like I said.
https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/pubescent
Ok so I said that fucking once? I literally said multiple times before you started going full retard that it may cause very little growth. You guys are delusional jfl.
Fasting will increase
Nutrition is important for igf1 levels https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15883443"pubescent. A pubescent girl or boy is a young person who's just reached the age of puberty, or sexual maturity. ... Pubescent girls and boys are at an in-between stage in their lives, no longer little kids, but not yet grownups."
And Intermittent fasting causes even more GH increase. Direct GH influences bone growth, not average GH levels. IGF-1 levels would matter more in terms of indirect bone growth (which we are still assuming it's a real thing)
show me the part where it says HGH without AI doesn't cause bone growth
"
"
- the products of the GH-IGF-1 system induce proliferation without maturation of the growth plate and thus induce linear skeletal growth.
- the action of the thyroid hormone axis is via an active metabolite that enters target cells and signals a nuclear receptor to stimulate both proliferation and maturation of the growth plate. Increased amounts of the active steroid hormone metabolite promote proliferation and maturation of the growth plate
Normal levels of GH, not accelrated.
Feel free to read https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8950623#targetText=One of the largest and,mg/kg per week).
This was a REAL STUDY Ddone with REAL HGH.
If you don't thin this is cope, ask @x30001 like I said.
https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/pubescent
Ok so I said that fucking once? I literally said multiple times before you started going full retard that it may cause very little growth. You guys are delusional jfl.
The study done on fasting im guessing this one https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC329619/ was a 5 day fast
Plz explain what you mean by this "Normal levels of GH, not accelrated. " and this "show me the part where it says HGH without AI doesn't cause bone growth"
They used 0.3mg/kg a week the did a follow up study after 9 years it says there bone age is 16 in males so we can guess that they were around7-10 years old
Please Please correct me if I'm wrong on this one but I picked a random number 130 pounds (a very very generous number because they were also short for there age idopathic short stature) pounds converted to kg, Then kg*mg which is 16.2 mg
according to this https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ta64/chapter/3-The-technology every 0.1mg is 0.3 iu of gh so 16.2*0.3
so its 4-5 iu each week... whic is 0.5-0.7 iu each day... Exogenous gh will shut down natural prodcution of gh. So they might have inhibited there own growth. I'm not sure about this one though
. Link me the study where gh causes maturation of bone age
Last edited: