Should injured baseball players be allowed to take HGH?

Posted: Published on June 15th, 2013

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

Though banned by the sport, one recuperating pitcher says HGH could help players heal

After a promising start to his career, Los Angeles Angels reliever Ryan Madson missed all of last season while recovering from Tommy John surgery.

Madson went under the knife last April, yet 14 months later, he's still not healthy enough to pitch. Frustrated by numerous setbacks, he suggested this week that human growth hormone could aid his recovery and that Major League Baseball, which currently bans its use, should allow rehabbing players to take it in limited cases.

"If HGH were legal, just in the process of healing, under a doctor's recommendation, in the right dosage, while you're on the [disabled list], I don't think that's such a bad idea as long as it doesn't have any lasting side effects, negative side effects," he told MLB.com.

More from Madson:

"But I will still believe, even if I get healthy without that," Madson added, "that it should be legal, in the right dosage, under supervision, with doctors, for the only purposes to help heal and get players back in the Major Leagues. Because people want to watch them, because of their talents, just to get them back on the field to play. That's it. I think it would be good for the game; I think it would be good for the fans. Fans want to see the best players play, and they want to see the players that they watch come back from injury and stay back. I think it would be a good thing." [MLB.com]

Madson's comments broached the delicate subject of performance enhancing drugs in baseball, a topic that has once again risen to the forefront of the game this year.

The Hall of Fame shut out everyone for the first time in years over mere suspicion that some players had taken PEDs. The league is reportedly considering unprecedented 100-game suspensions for star players linked to a PED-peddling Miami clinic. And though the league had already listed HGH as a banned substance, MLB and the players' union agreed over the winter to begin in-season testing for HGH for the first time.

MLB policy aside, the Food and Drug Administration has only approved HGH for limited uses, including hormonal imbalances and muscle-wasting diseases related to HIV. None of them have anything to do with expediting recovery times.

Yankees' pitcher Andy Pettite and others have admitted to using HGH, claiming it helped them recover from injuries faster than they otherwise would have. Yet there is no medical consensus on whether HGH actually has that effect.

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Should injured baseball players be allowed to take HGH?

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