My insurance company will pay for HGH, depending on my results to the Insulin Tolerance Test (ITT). My levels are borderline, so I am researching how to put my best foot forward on test day.
ITT Test:
During the test, insulin is injected in the patient. If the patient does not become hypoglycemic, additional insulin is given. After the patient becomes Hypoglycemic, blood samples are taken for HGH and glucose at 0, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes. A nurse monitors you closely for signs of severe low blood sugar. In a normal patient, HGH levels should rise to above 20 mU/L. If HGH rises less than 5 mU/L, insurance will pay for coverage.
What, theoretically, will give a better result to the ITT test? The following ideas come to mind to deplete either A.) the Release of HGH or B.) the stored HGH available for release:
The insurance company might accept an alternate test HGH stimulation test, based on the argument that the ITT test can cause dangerously low blood sugar. Instead of insulin, the other tests use Clonidine, GHRP, Arginine, GHRH, or both Arginine and GHRH. As far as I know, these tests do not monitor blood sugar.
ITT Test:
During the test, insulin is injected in the patient. If the patient does not become hypoglycemic, additional insulin is given. After the patient becomes Hypoglycemic, blood samples are taken for HGH and glucose at 0, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes. A nurse monitors you closely for signs of severe low blood sugar. In a normal patient, HGH levels should rise to above 20 mU/L. If HGH rises less than 5 mU/L, insurance will pay for coverage.
What, theoretically, will give a better result to the ITT test? The following ideas come to mind to deplete either A.) the Release of HGH or B.) the stored HGH available for release:
- Take X grams of glucose, X minutes before the test, to reduce HGH. (Since they monitor blood sugar, this would probably not work.)
- Take a glucose substitute that will reduce HGH without being detected by the glucose test. (Does this exist?)
- Sleep deprivation and high-glycemic food during the night before the test.
- Take antihistamine that causes drowsiness, X minutes before the test. Supposedly this inhibits HGH release.
- Take HGH for X days to reduce my endogenous HGH production, then have the ITT test X days later (after the exogenous HGH dissipates but before the endogenous HGH returns)
The insurance company might accept an alternate test HGH stimulation test, based on the argument that the ITT test can cause dangerously low blood sugar. Instead of insulin, the other tests use Clonidine, GHRP, Arginine, GHRH, or both Arginine and GHRH. As far as I know, these tests do not monitor blood sugar.
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