New York Times - Jun 7, 2006 By JACK CURRY. The suspicion that baseball players continue to use performance-enhancing substances even with the stricter drug testing in place this season ...
$2.95 - Charlotte Observer - NewsBank - Jun 2, 2002 It's a good thing Dr. Peter Gerrits enjoys watching children grow. His job depends on it. A pediatric endocrinologist at William Beaumont Hospital's ...
msnbc.com - Jun 9, 2006 SAN FRANCISCO - The latest scandal to hit Major League Baseball involves a rarely prescribed drug called human growth hormone that doctors give to children ...
San Francisco Chronicle - Oct 22, 2003 Recombinant human growth hormone, one of the first successful products of ... Containers with labels indicating they were human growth hormone were among ...
BusinessWeek - Nov 28, 2005 HGH is often hyped as a cure for aging. But as so with most fountains of youth, there's no proof that it works. And it can be harmful. Type the term "human ...
Free with registration - Sacramento Bee - AccessMyLibrary.com - Nov 13, 2002 Nov. 13--Injections of human growth hormone that can cost up to $15000 a year do lower body fat as people age, but dangerous side effects diminish ...
Forbes - May 31, 2006 HOLZKIRCHEN, Germany (AFX) - Novartis AG announced its Generics unit Sandoz has been granted FDA approval for its recombinant human growth hormone Omnitorpe ...
San Diego Union - Tribune - San Diego Union Tribune - Dec 2, 2004 Giambi described how he injected human growth hormone in his stomach and ... Giambi said he got the human growth hormone from a gym in Las Vegas. ...
New York Times - Sep 18, 2004 By LIZ ROBBINS. Dick Pound, the chief of the World Anti-Doping Agency, confirmed yesterday that athletes were tested for human growth hormone for the first ...
New York Times - Dec 22, 2002 Human growth hormone has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use by people with medical deficiencies, and once a drug is on the market, ...