Athletes on hGH sprint faster — Study

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SYDNEY: Australian scientists said yesterday they had shown for the first time that athletes who used a banned growth hormone could sprint faster but the substance did not improve strength, power or endurance.Using human growth hormone (hGH) could improve an athlete’s sprint speed by 4.0 to 5.0 per cent — potentially turning the last-place into a gold medallist in an Olympic track event, the study found.

“A 4.0 per cent improvement over a 10-second period is 0.4 seconds which is a huge time interval,” Professor Ken Ho, lead researcher at Sydney’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research, told AFP.

Ho said the study was the first scientific research showing improved physical function from using hGH, a naturally occurring hormone which is important for growth and metabolism and is banned by World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

The substance is thought to be widely abused by elite athletes who believe that injecting themselves with the growth hormone results in bigger muscles and therefore increases strength, power and endurance.

While the new findings justified the WADA ban, using growth hormone injections might not improve performance in all areas, Ho said.

“The advantage is really in the type of sporting event,” said Ho, who is also chairman of the Department of Endocrinology at Sydney’s St Vincent’s Hospital. “I don’t think it would help them if they were a rower or a weightlifter. But it would certainly help them if they were a sprinter.”

The study examined 103 recreational athletes aged 18 to 40 over eight weeks — some of whom were given daily injections of hGH and some of whom received placebos. One group of men also received testosterone injections with hGH.

In results published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, the researchers found the sprint capacity of those who received the growth hormone rose by 4-5 per cent, and that of those who also received testosterone jumped 8 per cent.

Growth hormone recipients did not increase their muscle mass but they did retain body fluid and experienced swelling and joint pain, according to the WADA-funded study.

The research, which used volunteers who had engaged in regular athletic training for at least a year, used lower doses of growth hormone than athletes are reported to use, and for a shorter time.

“We can speculate, therefore, that the drug’s effects on performance might be greater than shown in this study, and its side effects might be more serious,” said Ho.

Ho said the research, believed to be the largest scientific study on hGH as well as the first to study sprint capability, came about as a side project of Garvan’s four-year work on a test to detect hGH in athletes.

A test for hGH was first introduced at the 2004 Olympics in Athens but the first athlete believed to have tested positive to the substance was British rugby league player Terry Newton.

Newton, who played for Wakefield Trinity Wildcats, accepted a two-year ban in February after he was tested in late 2009. The use of hGH is difficult to detect because it is identical to the hormone which occurs naturally in the body.

Potential side effects from hGH include an overgrowth of bone which can lead to a protruding jaw and eyebrow bones and abnormal growth in hands and feet as well as the possible development of cancers and a shortened life expectancy. — AFP