Creatine; Does it Work?

Sports Science Exchange 91 Supplement

VOLUME 16 (2003) NUMBER 4

Creatine: Does It Work?

When athletes consume creatine in their diets, whether from meat and fish or from creatine supplements, some of the creatine will be absorbed from the blood into the muscles. Once in the muscles, creatine can be combined with phosphate to form phosphocreatine, a vital�but very limited�source of energy for brief, high-power activities such as sprinting and resistance training. It follows that creatine users should have more phosphocreatine energy available to perform these kinds of activities, leading to improved performance.

This rationale for consuming creatine supplements sounds great, and many millions of dollars worth of creatine supplements are sold every year. But even after the completion of several hundred scientific investigations, many questions remain about the value of creatine supplementation for performance of various sports and about how much and when to use creatine�if it should be used at all. Here is some of what is known:

TABLE 1S. Evidence that Supports or Refutes an Ergogenic Effect of Creatine for Various Performance Tests


Performance Test Evidence for Ergogenic Effect
Intense Brief Exercise (Laboratory Tests; <30 sec) Convincing
Weight-lifting (when creatine is used concurrently with resistance training) Convincing
Intense Exercise (Laboratory Tests; 30 sec to 3 min; intermittent effort) Moderately Convincing
Convincing Intense Exercise (Laboratory Tests; >3 min) Not Convincing
Intense Exercise (Field Tests such as Swimming and Sprinting) Not Convincing

SUGGESTED ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

Branch, J.D. (2003). Effect of creatine supplementation on body composition and performance: a meta-analysis. Int. J. Sport Nutr. Exerc. Metab. 13:198-226.

Kreider, R.B. (2003). Effects of creatine supplementation on performance and training adaptations. Mol. Cell. Biochem. 244:89-94.

Preen, D., B. Dawson, C. Goodman, J. Beilby, and S. Ching (2003). Creatine supplementation: a comparison of loading and maintenance protocols on creatine uptake by human skeletal muscle. Int. J. Sport Nutr. Exerc. Metab. 13:97-111.

Rawson, E. S. & Volek, J. S. (2003). The effects of creatine supplementation and resistance training on muscle strength and weight-lifting performance. J. Strength Cond. Res. 17, 822-831.

Terjung, R.L., P. Clarkson, E.R. Eichner, P. Greenhaff, P.J. Hespel, R.G. Israel, W.J. Kraemer, R.A. Meyer, L.L. Spriet, M.A. Tarnopolsky, A.J. Wagenmakers, and M.H. Williams (2000). American College of Sports Medicine roundtable. The physiological and health effects of oral creatine supplementation. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 32:706-717



Published in: Consumer News

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