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Discussion has failed to mention a few nutrients that promote new

bone growth. We all know vitamin C, calcium, magnesium and vitamin D

play a role in bone mineralisation.

But boron, strontium, and vanadium are nearly always overlooked.

These building blocks, plus a few amino acids such as SomaLife gHP or

injectable growth hormone HGH, necessary to keep up youthful

regneration in the elderly, will grow healthy, living, and resiliant

bone if added to the core four; now we have a core eight. HGH therapy

is particularly useful in the elderly who put out only a fraction of

healthy, youthful growth hormone levels; evn more so because it's

part of an anti-aging program. Clinical success on osteoarthritis,

osteopenia and osteoporosis with HGH therapy has been mentioned

earlier.

The core eight promotes new growth as opposed to conserving dead and

brittle bone cells in the manner of bisphosphonates such as Fosamax.

Fluorine is noted to increase fracture risk particularly in post-

menopausal women who most need the bone mineralisation. Neither have

a legitmate place in a health regime.

Duncan

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Hi Duncan:

Great post, I totally agree. Do you know a good mineral supplement

that combines all those elements in a readily absorbable form?

At 10:57 AM 7/19/2006, you wrote:

>Discussion has failed to mention a few nutrients that promote new

>bone growth. We all know vitamin C, calcium, magnesium and vitamin D

>play a role in bone mineralisation.

>

>But boron, strontium, and vanadium are nearly always overlooked.

>These building blocks, plus a few amino acids such as SomaLife gHP or

>injectable growth hormone HGH, necessary to keep up youthful

>regneration in the elderly, will grow healthy, living, and resiliant

>bone if added to the core four; now we have a core eight. HGH therapy

>is particularly useful in the elderly who put out only a fraction of

>healthy, youthful growth hormone levels; evn more so because it's

>part of an anti-aging program. Clinical success on osteoarthritis,

>osteopenia and osteoporosis with HGH therapy has been mentioned

>earlier.

>

>The core eight promotes new growth as opposed to conserving dead and

>brittle bone cells in the manner of bisphosphonates such as Fosamax.

>Fluorine is noted to increase fracture risk particularly in post-

>menopausal women who most need the bone mineralisation. Neither have

>a legitmate place in a health regime.

>

>Duncan

>

>

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Duncan

About rHGH for osteoporosis. I know that when rHGH stops, that any

benefits that the body achieve stop, & the body returns to the

pre-treatment state. Do you know offhand if bone density would also

return to pre-treatment state if rHGH injection treatment stopped?

I ask because I am osteopenic & osteoporosis runs in my family. I

agree strongly with you about getting adequate nutrients... I believe

nothing can help without first getting sufficient nutrients

..

Duncan Crow wrote:

> Discussion has failed to mention a few nutrients that promote new

> bone growth. We all know vitamin C, calcium, magnesium and vitamin D

> play a role in bone mineralisation.

>

> But boron, strontium, and vanadium are nearly always overlooked.

> These building blocks, plus a few amino acids such as SomaLife gHP or

> injectable growth hormone HGH, necessary to keep up youthful

> regneration in the elderly, will grow healthy, living, and resiliant

> bone if added to the core four; now we have a core eight. HGH therapy

> is particularly useful in the elderly who put out only a fraction of

> healthy, youthful growth hormone levels; evn more so because it's

> part of an anti-aging program. Clinical success on osteoarthritis,

> osteopenia and osteoporosis with HGH therapy has been mentioned

> earlier.

>

> The core eight promotes new growth as opposed to conserving dead and

> brittle bone cells in the manner of bisphosphonates such as Fosamax.

> Fluorine is noted to increase fracture risk particularly in post-

> menopausal women who most need the bone mineralisation. Neither have

> a legitmate place in a health regime.

>

> Duncan

>

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> Brown <scotflyr@...> wrote:

>

> Hi Duncan:

>

> Great post, I totally agree. Do you know a good mineral supplement

> that combines all those elements in a readily absorbable form?

I have no preferred product but I can tell you that a lot of people

were using borax or in AU, borax labelled 'ant poison' to get the

boron, and buying strontium as citrate. Vanadium often comes with

chromium because chromium is helpful for keeping cravings and insulin

sensitivity down. The chromium as I've mentioned is polynicotinate

in our stores in Canada. The SomaLife to increase HGH release comes

only from SomaLife.

The most readily absorbable form of calcium and magnesium are

orotate, secondly as aspartate, thirdly I think as citrate; I think

boron would be most available as aspartate. With these forms I think

there is little or no waste so the dose wouldn't have to be very

high. Vitamin C is best for the stomach when given as ascorbic acid.

Duncan

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Duncan,

Exercise, which loads bones, also strengthens them by stimulating

growth, and saturated animal fats help the body to use Vitamin D and

Calcium to build bone and reduces inflammation which can harm bone.

Duncan Crow wrote:

> Discussion has failed to mention a few nutrients that promote new

> bone growth. We all know vitamin C, calcium, magnesium and vitamin D

> play a role in bone mineralisation.

>

> But boron, strontium, and vanadium are nearly always overlooked.

> These building blocks, plus a few amino acids such as SomaLife gHP or

> injectable growth hormone HGH, necessary to keep up youthful

> regneration in the elderly, will grow healthy, living, and resiliant

> bone if added to the core four; now we have a core eight. HGH therapy

> is particularly useful in the elderly who put out only a fraction of

> healthy, youthful growth hormone levels; evn more so because it's

> part of an anti-aging program. Clinical success on osteoarthritis,

> osteopenia and osteoporosis with HGH therapy has been mentioned

> earlier.

>

> The core eight promotes new growth as opposed to conserving dead and

> brittle bone cells in the manner of bisphosphonates such as Fosamax.

> Fluorine is noted to increase fracture risk particularly in post-

> menopausal women who most need the bone mineralisation. Neither have

> a legitmate place in a health regime.

>

> Duncan

>

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> " nospam.rwp@... " <nospam.rwp@...> wrote:

>

> Duncan,

>

> Exercise, which loads bones, also strengthens them by stimulating

> growth, and saturated animal fats help the body to use Vitamin D and

> Calcium to build bone and reduces inflammation which can harm bone.

>

>

Without a doubt; in addition, exercise STRAIGTENS bone too by a

mechanism of pizeoelectric stimulation.

If we're going to go into the omega-6 fatty acids imbalance and

aggravated inflammation thing I think it would be better to start a

new thread for it; for now, anyone who wants the inside scoop on

inflammation and fats should read " Inflammation Nation " by Floyd F.

Chilton. A good reason to know about it is that inflammation rises

with age anyway and inflammation contributes in a major way to blood

coagulopathy, thrombosis, peipheral arterial disease, heart attack and

stroke, organ fibrosis that is the leading cause of organ failure, and

other nasty things, and most of it can be reversed and subsequently

entirely avoided. Knowing your fats is the academic part of an easy

cure.

Duncan

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Hi:

By the way, exercise mediated bone mineralization is

electrical. Bone consists of piezoelectric crystals. When these are

compressed, electric current is generated. This current keeps bones

mineralized.

I was involved in NASA research that also determined that a small DC

current across a healing fracture accelerates the healing and the

strength of the healed bone. Bone remineralization depends on and

thrives with electrical current. That is why humans in weightless

conditions of space flights - even young people - begin to lose bone

mineral. After prolonged space flight bones can have 50% or more of

the mineral removed from a lack of the piezoelectric effect of

gravity and movement/impact of normal planet bound activity. That is

why astronauts engage in daily impact exercise, it helps to keep

bones from demineralizing. In really long-term spaceflight (over a

year, for example) it may be essential to have artificial

gravity. Many other deleterious effects to the cardiac system and

muscles, among others, also occur. Russian astronauts returning

after long stints in space cannot walk on their own for a month after

returning.

At 01:04 PM 7/19/2006, you wrote:

>Duncan,

>

>Exercise, which loads bones, also strengthens them by stimulating

>growth, and saturated animal fats help the body to use Vitamin D and

>Calcium to build bone and reduces inflammation which can harm bone.

>

>

>

>Duncan Crow wrote:

> > Discussion has failed to mention a few nutrients that promote new

> > bone growth. We all know vitamin C, calcium, magnesium and vitamin D

> > play a role in bone mineralisation.

> >

> > But boron, strontium, and vanadium are nearly always overlooked.

> > These building blocks, plus a few amino acids such as SomaLife gHP or

> > injectable growth hormone HGH, necessary to keep up youthful

> > regneration in the elderly, will grow healthy, living, and resiliant

> > bone if added to the core four; now we have a core eight. HGH therapy

> > is particularly useful in the elderly who put out only a fraction of

> > healthy, youthful growth hormone levels; evn more so because it's

> > part of an anti-aging program. Clinical success on osteoarthritis,

> > osteopenia and osteoporosis with HGH therapy has been mentioned

> > earlier.

> >

> > The core eight promotes new growth as opposed to conserving dead and

> > brittle bone cells in the manner of bisphosphonates such as Fosamax.

> > Fluorine is noted to increase fracture risk particularly in post-

> > menopausal women who most need the bone mineralisation. Neither have

> > a legitmate place in a health regime.

> >

> > Duncan

> >

>

>

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Now I undestand why you twigged to the Becker research, . It's a

pleasure to meet you, even online.

It's a shame Becker's research funding dried up around the time he

spoke out against HAARP and that big underground antenna near the

Great Lakes with which they communicate well into the Atlantic over

earth frequency. He had been a key scientific advisor to the US

military fo years.

Anyway, he had just got to regenerating a rat's forelimb with the

method after it was amputated leaving a stump below the shoulder.

Duncan

> wrote:

> I was involved in NASA research that also determined that a small DC

> current across a healing fracture accelerates the healing and the

> strength of the healed bone. Bone remineralization depends on and

> thrives with electrical current.

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Apricot:

In a word, yes, when HGH values fall you will only be able to repair

at a rate that reflects your natural HGH secretion as it subsides and

levels off; that will include bone generation because all cells rely

on HGH in the receptor sites.

But the whole organism including bones doesn't depreciate very fast

because the new level of HGH secretion should reflect the younger

biolgical age afforded by many months of HGH elevation and resulting

restoration of the frame, tissues, organs and glands. Depreciation

can be accelerated of course by bad diet and lifestyle, low

antioxidant pool and so on as usual.

In practice, the longevity seekers I've met get anxious about

allowing the depreciation to occur so they do a short booster program

every couple of years if they stop the program at all in the first

place.

Adequate nutrients are essential, as is exercise.

How do rHGH injections compare costwise to about $83 monthly USD, the

price of SomaLife gHP amino acids with shipping? We're getting good

results with it, but I am aware that HGH injectable is getting

cheaper.

Duncan Crow

> Apricot85 <apricot85@...> wrote:

>

> Duncan

> About rHGH for osteoporosis. I know that when rHGH stops, that any

> benefits that the body achieve stop, & the body returns to the

> pre-treatment state. Do you know offhand if bone density would

also

> return to pre-treatment state if rHGH injection treatment stopped?

>

> I ask because I am osteopenic & osteoporosis runs in my family. I

> agree strongly with you about getting adequate nutrients... I

believe

> nothing can help without first getting sufficient nutrients

> .

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