ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
21.08.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Effects of Human Growth Hormone on Sports Performance

Author: Dane Fletcher Author Ranking Gold | Posted: 15-07-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 50 | Rating:  (270) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Dane Fletcher

Normal 0

Human growth hormone has become extremely popular in recent years. Until recently, it was very loosely monitored and dispensed freely by “anti-aging clinics”. Once it was discovered that men and women of all ages and walks of life – from young Olympia athlete, to professional football player, to active grandmother – were partaking in the HGH fountain of youth, its use was quickly regulated.

Why is HGH so popular? Aside from its ability to boost lean muscle mass, increase energy levels, and reduce body fat, growth hormone is also highly effective at improving sports performance. In the last year, we’ve seen dozens of reports of professional football, baseball, hockey, and mixed martial arts athletes being caught for growth hormone usage. Why is it so popular with athletes?

Growth hormone promotes faster recovery. In a sports world where athletes are training harder to be faster and stronger, the man who can heal faster from a tough workout will be the man signing the bigger contract.

Growth hormone is an incredibly synergistic drug. When coupled with any other compound, the effects of both the HGH, and the other compound, are multiplied. This means stacking growth hormone with a simple oral steroid will make the steroid more effective, and will make the HGH more effective. For this multiplier effect, growth hormone is extremely popular in off-season regimens when athletes will often stack up the compounds.

Growth hormone helps to heal connective tissue injuries. In many contact sports, it is connective tissue injuries, which can be the most detrimental. They aren’t muscle injuries, which you can train to prepare for – they are joint failures from outside contact. Growth hormone makes them heal faster, which gets athletes back on the field faster.

Increased oxygen uptake is another side effect of growth hormone. Any athlete running 99 yards carrying a football, being chased by 11 angry men in pads, knows the importance of every bit of oxygen he can pull into the lungs.

There is not yet a great deal of studies that have been conducted on athletes using growth hormones. Most world-class athletes participate in sports, which ban the use of this compound, so use is secretive. Additionally, the media stigma of “steroids = cheating” means any athlete remotely linked to growth hormone use will lose endorsement opportunities. As time passes and more athletes retire and come forward with their details, the pieces of the puzzle of HGH and athletic performance will begin to come together.

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/bodybuilding-articles/effects-of-human-growth-hormone-on-sports-performance-485079.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Dane Fletcher is the world's most prolific bodybuilding and fitness expert and is currently the executive editor for BodybuildingToday.com. If you are looking for more bodybuilding tips or information on weight training, or supplementation, please visit www.BodybuildingToday.com, the bodybuilding and fitness authority site with hundreds of articles available FREE to help you meet your goals.

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

10 "Superfoods" For Bodybuilders
By: Keishon Martin | 07/01/2008 | Muscle Building
Tired of the same old foods? Remember to consume a wide variety of healthful foods. Because a healthy bodybuilder can be a better bodybuilder.

Creatine Monohydrate - Answers To Your 5 Most Commonly Asked Questions
By: Warren Kuhl | 24/03/2007 | Health
What exactly is creatine and what does it do? Creatine is a substance that is found naturally within the muscle cells of the body. 95% of this amino acid-based compound is found in around the skeletal muscles with the other 5% stored elsewhere in the body. This metabolite consists mainly of...

Body Building Your Way To Success
By: Shaun Parker | 13/10/2007 | Non-Fiction
Not sure about the various types of bodybuilding supplements out there? Read our rough guide on what's what for the art of bodybuilding.

Human Growth Hormone Risks and Benefits Require More Study
By: Jessica Deets | 30/03/2006 | Fitness
Human growth hormone medications have gained a lot of notoriety lately. The truth of the matter is science is still unlocking the potential of the hormone for helping under-developed children and assisting adults with a number of illnesses. It's even show

Visualization for Bodybuilding and Fitness
By: Troy Pearsall | 25/05/2007 | Muscle Building
This article addresses the growth possibilities when using Visualization in bodybuilding and fitness sports. It addresses what visualization is and how to go about incorporating visualization into a health bodybuilding routine.

Glutamine - Commonly Asked Questions And Answers
By: Warren Kuhl | 11/04/2007 | Health
When it comes to enhancing your muscles, bodybuilders across the world have discovered the benefits of taking a glutamine supplement. This commonly found amino acid is present throughout the entire body, totaling more than 60% of skeletal muscle. Glutamine also serves important bodily functions, as it offers a decent amount...

Human Growth Hormone (hgh) And Muscle Building
By: Bob Giddy | 13/06/2007 | Sports and Fitness
Human growth hormone or HGH as it is also known has been the talk of bodybuilding and muscle building circles for a number of years now. Research has shown that having high levels of human growth hormone can be beneficial if you are trying to build muscle especially as you...

Understanding Creatine
By: Anthony Robbinson | 21/09/2007 | Muscle Building
Learn about creatine! What is Creatine, does creatine work, what are creatine supplements and why you should or shouldn’t use them!

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Bodybuilding Articles

New Rules of Exercise
By: Sandra Prior | 20/08/2008
Try the 50-40-10 Plan for Strength, Endurance and Longevity.

7 Untold Tips on Bodybuilding Fitness Workouts
By: Maverick Taylor | 20/08/2008
Everyone is becoming more and more conscious of their health, these days, and taking up bodybuilding fitness workouts is becoming more and more common. It seems like everyone is going to the gym lately.

Fit for Life
By: Sandra Prior | 19/08/2008
A strong, flexible body makes everything in your life better, from running a 10km and starting a business to catching her eye. But if you’re working out the same old way, you’ve got to change.

Bench, Deadlift, & Squats: Tips for Perfecting the Big Three
By: Dane Fletcher | 19/08/2008
Every bodybuilder knows that the “Big Three” exercises – Bench press, deadlifts, and squats – are the key to making gains in muscle mass and strength. Let’s check out a few tips and ideas for making the most of these exercises, and doing it safely.

Planning Cardio Around Leg Workout Day
By: Dane Fletcher | 19/08/2008
Many bodybuilders consider weight training and cardio training to be two separate things. In reality, since both utilize the legs, careful planning should take place to ensure your cardio doesn’t interfere with your weight training, and vice versa.

Where are Steroids Best Used?
By: Jhoana Cooper | 19/08/2008
Steroids have a reputation for building muscle mass and increasing physical strength. However, this is one highly controversial subject among doctors, athletes and specialists of the industry.

Getting Ready for Female Bodybuilding Competitions
By: Elle Nash | 15/08/2008
I'm here to talk to you about female bodybuilding competitions and how you can get ready for them. This is what I like to call crunch time. It's the time where you have to make sure everything works.

Evaluating Biceps Potential
By: Dane Fletcher | 14/08/2008
It’s long been considered that the gap between the biceps and the elbow joint could be measured to determine ones potential for success in competitive bodybuilding. The great champions always seemed to have full biceps heads, which flowed, neatly into the elbow joints. If they possess this attribute, it meant their muscle bellies flowed equally well in the other parts of the body. Their calves, quads, and pecs would tie in just as gracefully.

More from Dane Fletcher

Bench, Deadlift, & Squats: Tips for Perfecting the Big Three
By: Dane Fletcher | 19/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
Every bodybuilder knows that the “Big Three” exercises – Bench press, deadlifts, and squats – are the key to making gains in muscle mass and strength. Let’s check out a few tips and ideas for making the most of these exercises, and doing it safely.

Planning Cardio Around Leg Workout Day
By: Dane Fletcher | 19/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
Many bodybuilders consider weight training and cardio training to be two separate things. In reality, since both utilize the legs, careful planning should take place to ensure your cardio doesn’t interfere with your weight training, and vice versa.

Testosterone and Memory Loss
By: Dane Fletcher | 19/08/2008 | Wellness
The benefits of testosterone are many. The user gains strength and muscle mass. Body fat levels drop, and sexual thirst rises. The user feels energetic, strong, happy, positive, and above all, young. Testosterone is perfect, right? Maybe not.

Evaluating Biceps Potential
By: Dane Fletcher | 14/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
It’s long been considered that the gap between the biceps and the elbow joint could be measured to determine ones potential for success in competitive bodybuilding. The great champions always seemed to have full biceps heads, which flowed, neatly into the elbow joints. If they possess this attribute, it meant their muscle bellies flowed equally well in the other parts of the body. Their calves, quads, and pecs would tie in just as gracefully.

Hamstrings: Supersetting for Sick Leg Muscle
By: Dane Fletcher | 14/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
The hamstrings, or the leg biceps, are the small muscle group located on the back of the thighs. Since these muscles are hidden from sight in most bodybuilding poses (at least the ones we see from the front), they are often overlooked in training. Admittedly, there are only a few exercises that directly hit them. Toss in the fact that they cannot grow very much (except in a few genetic freaks) and that they show minimal shape or definition until contest conditioning is achieved.

Effects of Illegal Anabolic Steroids on the Liver
By: Dane Fletcher | 13/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
When the liver is facing additional stress and work due to the presence of anabolic steroids, it releases compounds called SGOT and SGPT. When the damage stops being incurred, it stops releasing these two chemicals. Standard blood screens detect the levels of SGOT and SGPT, and those are the readings that doctors use to analyze just how much damage is being incurred by the liver.

Deadlifting Safety
By: Dane Fletcher | 13/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
The lower back is a very weak area in some people, so care should be taken too properly warm up to minimize the chance of injury. Use higher-rep work on deadlifts once per month to ensure many slow-twitch fibers are recruited, so maximum back growth is stimulated. Good luck, and be safe!

Calf Raise Variants to Help Meet Your Needs
By: Dane Fletcher | 13/08/2008 | Bodybuilding
As a result of this lack of attention and very often, lack of available equipment, many bodybuilders build calves, which are lacking development in all areas. This can be fixed, of course, using a few exercises to isolate those poor areas.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below