The difference between HGH releasers and oral sprays – Part One

By | November 25, 2007

A lot of HGH products being sold on the market are either HGH releasers or HGH sprays. There are distinct differences between the two, mainly in the mode of delivery. I’ll talk about that later, but for starters, let’s highlight a few misconceptions about these HGH products.

First of all, these are all not the real Human Growth Hormone itself, but a secondary product to stimulate HGH release. If anyone tries to sell you a HGH product and tells you it is real HGH, walk away – fast. Due to the sensitive nature of HGH, real HGH is only procured, regulated, and sold by large pharmaceutical labs, and administered by professional doctors. Or at least I hope it is…

The truth is that real HGH is costly to manufacture, and the only real mode of delivery is through an injection, direct into the bloodstream. Lately, China sourced HGH has flooded the market, but the safety and/or reliability of these vials of foreign sourced HGH remains to be proven. If you do go on a real HGH replacement therapy, you need a really qualified doctor to administer it to you, and monitor your progress, and be prepared to pay anything from $10,000 – $30,000 a year in expenses.

As for the HGH products being sold on the open market (as we mentioned earlier), there are 2 kinds:

  1. HGH oral sprays
  2. HGH releasers

HGH oral sprays

HGH oral sprays operate on the basis of sublingual absorption through the tissues underneath the tongue. Normally, you’ll be asked to spray the content underneath the tongue, and it was supposed to be absorbed by your body within a few seconds.

I won’t give a definitive judgment as to how effective these HGH products are, but I will say once again, that the only real mode of delivery of HGH into the body is through direct injections. Some of these products claim to have a mixture of amino acids and other “exotic” ingredients. Others go so far as to claim to contain real HGH hormone within the fluid, albeit at extremely diluted amounts (more like a few molecules floating in the vast expenses of the fluid).

There might be real HGH hormone within, but the extremely sparse amount purported to be contained within the bottle’s contents seems to me, to be pretty much ineffective.

Also, the HGH molecule itself is a very large molecule – how would it get absorbed through the tissue lining in the first place?

Unless they actually work following the HGH releaser model (albeit, delivered via oral spray), I wouldn’t give them much consideration.

To be continued in part two.

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Category: HGH