Hgh (Human Growth Hormone) and Anti aging Products Scams Exposed!
This has been high time that all bogus hgh and anti aging related companies get exposed.Beware of all anti-aging products and human growth hormone scams before shelling out your money. Be informed and not ignorant.Editor's Note:- Avoiding scams has become easier after analyzing ingredients of around 50 hgh products and receiving feedbacks from visitors and consumers. If you want to buy quality products go for Genf20 and GHR1000.They are the best in business. Please stay away from any oral spray product. Till date I havn't found a working oral spray product nor one that isn't garbage in terms of its ingredients. Also run away from any company that says it's product contains real hgh human growth hormone or Somatotrophin. I am trying my best to review hgh products and I will update the site with more information soon.
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We all get excited about the promises of HGH and other anti-aging products and methods and sometimes also totally confused by the amount of information online. So, an extensive research into HGH and everything about human growth hormone and anti-aging in general was highly required. Hence, this site.
Now, HGH IS truly an amazing substance that has been shown to have numerous, clinically proven benefits. Various studies have actually confirmed the facts. In fact, studies published in the New England Journal of Medicine prove that HGH can:
* Decrease Bodyfat
* Increase Muscle Tone
* Boost your Energy, Strength, and Endurance
* Reduce Wrinkles and Create Tighter, Smoother Skin
* Help sound healthy sleep
* Improve Sex Drive and Performance
* Improve Immune and Heart Function, Bone Density, Healing Time and Cholesterol
* Improve Brain Function, Memory and Mental Focus
HGH is produced by the pituitary gland in the center of the brain. Everyone naturally has human growth hormone in their body from birth. During adolescence, when we are at an optimal youthful condition, production of HGH is high. However, your HGH levels peak somewhere between the ages of 21 and 30 and then aggressively decline at the alarming rate of 14% per decade.
Research has shown that virtually every adult is HGH deficient. By the age of 40 you may already have “elderly” levels of HGH production, down as much as 50% of youthful levels of human growth hormone.
But unfortunately 98% of HGH and other anti-aging products sold online are pure scams.
Scams and marketing tactics
One way that many companies use is creating search engines and websites to deceive customers and by constructing bogus comparison charts that imply a fair comparison among anti-aging and growth hormone products, but that actually place self-serving product recommendations at the top of the list. You never know that a person who charts out such comparison charts are actually the owners of the companies. Often times several counterfeit ingredients are used in forming the product and marketed something like "herbal hgh" or "herbal growth enhancers" and so on. What a con artist does is sets up shell corporations then slaps three (or more) different labels on the products, making it look like it all comes from three different companies. Then he sets up a rigged consumer comparison website and, coincidentally, happens to list his very own products as top-rated recommendations.
Several companies say their product contains a “huge” dose of 1500 to 2000 nanograms (ng) of real HGH. A nanogram ( ng ) equal one billionth of a gram. That is 1/1,000,000,000 of a gram. So, 100,000 nanograms would be a whole lot of nothing! ( Note: Most products especially oral sprays claim only a few thousand nanograms or a little bit of nothing. ) Now, any product that says it contains real hgh is a guaranteed scam. To top it, if they are backing it up by saying it contains so much "nano gms." , just run away from that company. They aren't even knowing what they are doing or probably gambling on the fact that most consumers have no clue what the "nanos" are.
The majority of natural HGH products are referred to as “HGH releasers”, “HGH Precursors” and “HGH Secretagogues”. Though , there are some reliable companies selling quality products, most of such products are nothing more than glorified amino acid supplements that have been around forever that are now trying to capitalize on the popularity of HGH at over-inflated prices. In fact, according to a very informative book by Dr. H.A. Davis dealing with natural supplementation:
“30% of patients tested DO NOT respond to the GH...‘releasers’ or ‘secretagogues’. Such products have been around a long time and, in many cases, have never yielded the same quality and consistent results.”