GH3 Anti-Aging Supplement?
I have received in the mail a brochure from Gero Vita Laboratories
describing their supposed anti-aging supplement. Their product is called
GH3 and contains "DMAE, PABA, magnesium, pyridoxine, zinc, folic acid,
cobalamin, Hypericum, selenomethionine, beta-carotene, RRR-a-tocopheryl,
calcium, thiamine, chromium polynicotinate, glutathione and ascorbyl
palmitate" (the amounts of each are not provided). They claim to have
research data that substantiates the effects of GH3 but will only mail
it to licensed medical professionals (send in a business card to get the
research data).
-These are all beneficial nutritional ingredients. However, you should
never take anything which doesn't list the amounts of each ingredient.
-Some people swear by it. As a result, a friend gave me a three day supply and
wanted to know what I thought of it. I usually don't do concoctions - I
prefer guaging each item by itself. Still, I tried it for *one* day (I
believe it said to take two). I didn't like it. I didn't take any more.
I found it to be more of a stone than anything else. Perhaps it has to do
with the fact that I'm sensitive to whatever I take, or that I don't use
anything heavy or recreational and am therefore no longer tuned to blasts of
mind and mood-altering agents, but I got the definite feeling that GH3 was
more for recreational use than for anything else. At least that's what my
experience told me.
Of course these things hit different people in different ways. It might even
be beneficial to someone's problems. I don't know - but you asked