It is widely understood that adults who have a growth hormone deficiency, a condition that affects an estimated 10,000,000 people annually worldwide, tend to have excess body fat and less strength in their muscles. However, little has been known about how prolonged growth hormone therapy can impact muscle strength – until now. Dr. Galina Gotherstrom and colleagues at Goteborg University studied how 10 years of growth hormone treatment affected 109 people with adult-onset growth hormone deficiency. Study participants were an average age of 50. The investigators looked specifically at muscle strength and neuromuscular function.
They discovered that long-term treatment with growth hormones of at least 10 years improves muscle strength in people with adult-onset growth hormone deficiency. Specifically, the team learned that the first five years of treatment restored muscle strength, while during the second five years, growth hormone therapy was responsible for slowing normal age-related loss of strength. In a Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism report, the researchers noted that “growth hormone replacement induced a sustained increase in lean mass and isometric knee flexor strength during the first five years and increases in upper leg and handgrip strength.”
Muscle strength decreased during the second five years, returning to previous levels and in some cases, lower levels. But when the age and gender of each participant was taken into account, Gotherstrom’s team found that “there were sustained and even progressive increases in the measures of muscle strength through seven years of follow-up.” They concluded that the net result was that leg and hand strength returned to normal levels after 10 years of growth hormone replacement therapy.
News Release: Growth hormone slows age-related loss of strength www.reuters.com April 9, 2009