I believe you're asking about hormone medications.
It's possible, but a child needs to be under a doctor's supervision.
Human growth hormone (or just growth hormone).Cortisol
i believe it can be. you must also diet and work out regularly also. if you use HGH and want it to help you to it's positive effects. don't use HGH if you are under 25 years old. because people that age have enough groth hormone.
An increase in height of 4-6 in (10-15 cm) can occur in the first year of treatment. Following this first year, the response to the hormone is not as successful. Therefore the amount of growth hormone administered must be tripled to maintain this rate.
pituitary gland in her brain. Growth hormone is essential for normal growth and development, and a deficiency can result in short stature. Medical intervention, such as hormone replacement therapy, may be necessary to help individuals with growth hormone deficiencies attain a more typical height.
Growth hormone to increase adult height. Hormone replacement therapy is begun during adolescence and continued. People with Turner syndrome may also take medication for associated medical conditions, such as high blood pressure and thyroid conditions.
Weight training increases the amount of Growth Hormone produced by the pituitary gland. The hormone that increases your height.
No growth pills for height do not work. If you have an underdeveloped pituitary gland your doctor may give you growth hormone shots that stimulate growth.
Growth hormone is the hormone that stimulates bone and muscle growth. It is made in the pituitary gland. It is also known as somatotropin. Growth hormone is responsible for the increase in height in children and adolescents. It also increases bone density and muscle mass, and stimulates organ growth.
The term for abnormal increase in height due to an excess of growth hormone is gigantism. This condition usually occurs before puberty when the growth plates are still open, resulting in excessive growth of the long bones.
You might, possibly, be talking about human growth hormone.
Acromegaly: a disorder where the pituitary gland produces too much growth hormone, leading to excessive growth of tissues and organs. Dwarfism: a condition characterized by a lack of growth hormone production, resulting in short stature. Gigantism: a condition caused by an overproduction of growth hormone before puberty, leading to excessive growth and height.
characterized by a slight intrauterine growth retardation, relatively normal growth rates for the first several years of life, a progressive deceleration of growth later in childhood, and the lack of a pubertal growth spurt.