With over hundreds of clinical studies, Creatine is truly the poster child for the supplement industry. Bottom line, Creatine skyrockets your Strength, Power, Lean Muscle Gains, and Endurance, SAFELY, NATURALLY, and EFFECTIVELY. If you REALLY want those major gains from the gym, the type of hard, lean muscle that literally turns heads, then you NEED to be on the stuff. It literally is the KING of all Non-Hormonal Muscle Building Supplements. In a clinical trial, researchers gave Creatine to a group of football players for 9 weeks. During this time, these freshmen athletes were weight training 4 times a week. At the end of the 9 weeks, the creatine group gained an average of 8 pounds of solid, lean mass. Yeah that‘s right, average.
It’s common for Creatine users to experience up to a 10 pound gain of Lean Mass on their first cycle! Whether you’re a bodybuilder, athlete of any sport, or just looking to add some hard muscle for hitting the bar or the beach, you can reap the benefits of Creatine. BUT WAIT! Before you start your first cycle of Creatine, you need to KNOW SOMETHING - the facts.
Without getting into boring scientific jargon…
Supplementing with Creatine SUPER saturates your muscles with creatine, which provides a boost in strength and muscle mass by quickly replenishing your “ATP," the major energy source you use when you’re lifting weights and doing high intensity workouts.
Not to mention, everywhere Creatine goes, so does water, and that means it hyper hydrates your muscles, delivering you CRAZY muscle pumps and an immediate increases in strength and overall muscle volume!
So you’ve got a two prong approach for performance. It works to help you lift heavier weights, for more repetitions, and it gives you that “3D” full muscle look.
Your arms will look bigger and more pumped.
Your shoulders will look more capped, and your chest will look FULL.
MYTH #1
HIGH GLYCEMIC SUGARS (IE. DEXTROSE) MUST BE TAKEN
The basic form of Creatine was discovered many years ago and ever since the industry has been trying to make it better. Early research showed combining Creatine with insulin spiking glucose (dextrose/sugar), usually 75-90g, would make it absorb better.
The Bottom Line: Although adding high glycemic sugars does help improve the absorption of Creatine, this is generally only for NON responders. For everyone else, it’s simply not needed and probably detrimental to your diet.
MYTH #2
CAFFEINE KILLS CREATINE'S EFFECTS
A lot of “Bro-Science” on the internet, claiming you can NOT take Creatine with caffeine. While one study many years ago suggested that caffeine hurt the results of Creatine, no follow-up studies could replicate the fact. A similar follow-up study investigated an alternative strategy to optimize the independent effects of Creatine and caffeine.
Subjects abstained from caffeine during the loading period for 6 days. Then they ingested a single dose of caffeine prior to exercise. They proved that acute ingestion of caffeine has ergogenic effects on short-term, high-intensity exercise regardless of whether Creatine supplementation precedes the caffeine ingestion or not.
The Bottom Line: A non-issue. You can use supplements containing caffeine like P.P.K.™ and still obtain the benefits of Creatine supplementation Lean Muscle, Strength, and Power!
MYTH #3
CREATINE HARMS YOUR KIDNEYS
Not true. Adverse effects have been released through the press, media and internet forums, and well, even your “family doctor.” Despite several unproven allegations on the health of the kidney & liver, they're all B.S. There are just NO studies to support any of these claims in healthy subjects supplementing with Creatine monohydrate, even when taken during several months in young and older populations alike.
Not to mention, many researchers believe there are other health benefits to Creatine, such as helping with MS, and aiding with various diseases of the brain.
The Bottom Line: I would like to say nonexistent risks, but it’s better to say minimal to be fair and “legally” appropriate. There are LONG term studies – 100’s of them and millions and millions of users, you do the math!
MYTH #4
CREATINE CAUSES MUSCLE CRAMPING
When athletes who were using Creatine got a cramp they assumed it was the Creatine. Even though they usually experience exercise induced cramps.
These anecdotal reports and gastrointestinal complaints during supplementation, although very limited, can not be linked to Creatine.
These FALSE reports get propagated by individuals who are not educated in the true science behind Creatine.
The Bottom Line: Creatine can actually REDUCE cramping. Also, as it improves thermoregulation, meaning Creatine can actually aid in the body’s hydration process.
MYTH #5
CREATINE IS A DANGEROUS STEROID
Creatine is not a steroid and don’t let anybody tell you that it is. Creatine does not have a steroidal structure and does not have any of the side effects associated with any pro hormone or anabolic steroid.
The Bottom Line: NO, Creatine is not a steroid. Although you will see significant gains in lean size and strength.
MYTH #6
YOU MUST CYCLE ON AND OFF CREATINE
A very common question with a very simple answer, NO! You do not need to cycle. There is no particular reason why you need to. When you stop Creatine, regardless of how long you are on it, your body will continue to make it at a normal physiological level.
The Bottom Line: The “Wash-Out” period for creatine is 30 days. So if for some reason you do choose to cycle it, you must stay off of it for a minimum of 30 days. Using it for 1 week on, 1 week off is pointless.
MYTH #7
YOU MUST TIME YOUR CREATINE DOSE
There has been so much discussion on when you should take Creatine - pre, post, morning, night? The plain and simple answer is that it does not matter!
Creatine works by gradually building up in your body. It is an ACCUMULATIVE effect, not ACUTE like with caffeine. It should be taken every day to get and keep your muscle reserves as high as possible.
The Bottom Line: It doesn’t matter when you take Creatine, as long as you take it every day.
MYTH #8
YOU MUST LOAD CREATINE FOR MAXIMUM RESULTS
The classical, yet deceiving “Creatine Loading” regimen was created for one reason, to make you use and BUY more Creatine. Marketing claimed you needed to “load” Creatine to raise your levels in your tissue above baseline to really saturate your muscles. It consisted for an initial phase of up to 25g per day for up to a week, followed by a lower maintenance dose of 5g a day.
This is simply NOT necessary. By taking just a dose of 5g a day your muscles will end up just as saturated in nearly the same amount of time.
The Bottom Line: Although “loading” will get you there a bit quicker, it’s going to cost you more, and most users end up experiencing digestive issues from the abnormal amount of Creatine.
MYTH #9
YOU'LL LOSE ALL YOUR GAINS ONCE YOU COME OFF
I’m not sure if this myth was created by supplement companies to keep you ON Creatine and HOOKED, or if it is because guys who take steroids lose their gains when they cease their use.
Fact is, you already know your body will continue to produce Creatine when you stop. While you were on Creatine, you would have been making skeletal muscle and strength gains, an adaptive response if you are training correctly! As long as you continue training and eating properly, you’ll keep the core gains you made. You might drop a bit of water, but what you really want, the lean muscle and strength gains should stay!
The Bottom Line: You shouldn’t lose your gains when you come off, and well, you don’t even have to come off if you don’t want to!
Now that you know the truth about creatine and you're ready to pack on muscle, pick yours up today!
Team Blue Star Nutraceuticals™.
References:
1. Kreider. 2003. Mol and Cellular Biochemistry. 244:89-92
2. Maughan. 1995. Int J Sport Nutr. 5(2):94-101.
3. Harris et al. 1992. Clin Sci. 83: 367-374
4. Greehnaff et al.1993. Clin Sci 84; 564-571
5. Juhn and Tarnopolsky. 1998. Clin J Sports Med. 8:286-287
6. Terjung et al. 2000. Med Sci Sports Sci. 32:706-717
7. Vandenberge et al. 1996. J Apply Physiol 80: 452-457
8. Vandenberge et al. 1997. J Apply Physiol. 83: 2055-2063
9. Vandebuerie et al. 1998. Int J Sports Med. 19: 490-495
10. Kreider et al. 1998. Med Sci Sports Sci. 30: 73-82
11. Conway et al. 2003. J Appl Physiol 94:1557-1562
12. Hoffman et al. 2005. J of Strength and Cond Res. 19(2):260-264
13. Willoughby DA & Rosene J. (2001). Med Sci Sports Sci. 33(10): 1674-1681.
14. Robinson et al. 1999. J Appl Physiol. 87: 598-604
15. Pearson et al. 1999. J Strength Cond. Res. 13:187-192.
16. Jager et al. 2008. JISSN. Pg 1-2
17. Taylor et al. 2011. J Sport Sci Med. 10:254-260
18. Deldicque et al. 2008. Eur J Appl Physiol. 102(2):133-143
19. Jager et al. 2011. Amino Acids. 40:1369-1383
20. Child & Tallon. 2007. ISSN 4th Meeting Juen 12, 2007
21. Melloni et al. 1979. Arzneimittelforschung.
29 (9A):1477-1479
22. Nicaise. 1975. Curr Ther res Clin Exp. 17(6).531-534
23. Doherty et al. 2002. Med Sci Sports Exerc.
34 (11)1785-1792
24. Giese & Lecher. 2009. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 388(2): 252-255
25. Spillane et al. 2009. J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 6:6
26. Dash AK & Sawhney A.(2002) 29:939-945
27. Kim et al. 2011. Amino Acids. 40:1409-1418
28. Buford et al. 2007. JISSN. 4:6
29. Kreider et al. 2010. JISSN 7:7
|
-
10-22-2014, 07:36 AM #1
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
THE TRUTH ABOUT CREATiNE - 9 MYTHS EXPOSED
Chris Belanger | Vice President, Sales
www.bluestarnutraceuticals.com
chris@bluestarnutraceuticals.com
Stay Connected with Exclusive Content & Special Offers:
********: bluestarnutraceuticals
Instagram: @bluestarnutraceuticals
YouTube: bluestarnutraceuticals
-
10-24-2014, 02:50 PM #2
-
10-25-2014, 05:09 AM #3
-
10-28-2014, 05:33 PM #4
-
-
10-29-2014, 06:32 AM #5
- Join Date: Sep 2014
- Location: Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom (Great Britain)
- Posts: 420
- Rep Power: 1438
Nice thread, would give you my poverty reps but on spread
*Arsenal FC Crew*
*I'm from Northern Ireland not Ireland Crew*
*Misc makes me laugh at work, people look at me weird crew*
My fierce 5 log http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=164600671
Fat to Fit Thread - http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=164664681&p=1304031191#post1304031191
-
10-29-2014, 01:08 PM #6
- Join Date: Jul 2014
- Location: Maine, United States
- Age: 45
- Posts: 1,277
- Rep Power: 3362
This is a great article. In your research have there been any studies done on indivuals who have had kidney disease? I had to take lithuim and it damaged my kidneys. One almost completely stopped functioning, the other less than 50%. I went off lithuim years ago and now both my kindeys have mostly recovered. Both function slightly less than 100%.
I can't find many studies and I have looked on creatine and prior kidney disease. If I could find some more information I may ask my kidney doctor about. Speaking of which, since my kidneys have mostly recovered I don't see him on a regular basis, just as needed (like if my blood work showed high creatine).
-
10-29-2014, 02:02 PM #7
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
Thanks for stopping by.
I can't think of any at the top of my head, but I would always recommend strict caution with higher protein, amino acids, including creatine for one with prior kidney damage or disease even when 100% recovered.
110%, something you would need to discuss with your physician.
Should I happen to come across a study, I'll gladly post it.Chris Belanger | Vice President, Sales
www.bluestarnutraceuticals.com
chris@bluestarnutraceuticals.com
Stay Connected with Exclusive Content & Special Offers:
********: bluestarnutraceuticals
Instagram: @bluestarnutraceuticals
YouTube: bluestarnutraceuticals
-
10-29-2014, 06:31 PM #8
- Join Date: Jul 2014
- Location: Maine, United States
- Age: 45
- Posts: 1,277
- Rep Power: 3362
Thank you for the reply. I've looked myself but haven't found many studies either. I'm going to keep looking.
I do take bcaa's and I did run it by my kidney doctor and he said it was ok. I'm limited in the supplements I feel comfortable taking between the kidney disease and my bipolar. However, again, your article was very informative. Thank you again.
-
-
10-29-2014, 08:11 PM #9
-
10-30-2014, 02:19 AM #10
-
11-03-2014, 06:48 AM #11
-
11-03-2014, 08:21 AM #12
Good read
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=151900493
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=155687453
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=158712003&p=1173461123#post1173461123
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=153605241
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=152898281
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=151954013
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=151395423
http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showthread.php?t=150428813
-
-
11-03-2014, 09:43 AM #13
-
11-03-2014, 01:06 PM #14
-
11-03-2014, 01:28 PM #15
- Join Date: Apr 2012
- Location: Waianae, Hawaii, United States
- Age: 36
- Posts: 1,201
- Rep Power: 3396
awesome article, very informative and gets the point out there so anyone could understand. I agree that creatine is the poster child, I remember back in the day there were these creatine gummy like candies that were red. I forget the name/brand but my dad had boxes of them I used to love those things lol because back then creatine powder just tasted horrible lol had to be tough to drink that stuff haha or at least that's what I thought.
Never give up
Fight for what YOU believe in
Push past the threshold
Pain is only temporary, but glory last a lifetime
Instagram: @dp_808
-
11-03-2014, 01:31 PM #16
- Join Date: Apr 2012
- Location: South East, United Kingdom (Great Britain)
- Posts: 1,264
- Rep Power: 1928
-
-
11-03-2014, 08:43 PM #17
I am new to the supplement game (aside from protein powders) and I have recently been interested in creatine. There seems to be a few competing statements out there and I appreciate the information you have complied. The majority of information I have found seems to be in line with the facts you state. I am particularly intrigued by the cycling one as one source said a 1 week cycle is fine, but I do not see why, if I were taking creatine myself, that I would stop taking it for a week randomly.
One thing I would like to see though, are superscripts of the reference number at the end of various statements/facts that you have compiled.
If I was playing devil's advocate, all I see is a bunch of information that is summarized, and then a list of references that were used. It would be near impossible for a reader if they wanted to verify the statements as they would need to go through each and every reference just for one statement.
-
11-04-2014, 04:18 AM #18
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
Last edited by Gym God; 11-04-2014 at 05:43 AM.
Chris Belanger | Vice President, Sales
www.bluestarnutraceuticals.com
chris@bluestarnutraceuticals.com
Stay Connected with Exclusive Content & Special Offers:
********: bluestarnutraceuticals
Instagram: @bluestarnutraceuticals
YouTube: bluestarnutraceuticals
-
11-04-2014, 06:13 AM #19
-
11-04-2014, 06:44 AM #20
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
It's been documented that it takes a few days to occur, hence why creatine serum is not as effective as 100% creatine monohydrate. Based on the findings, making a shake the night before is not going to cause much harm if any.
IMO I prefer to just have my creatine by itself for the majority of the time.Chris Belanger | Vice President, Sales
www.bluestarnutraceuticals.com
chris@bluestarnutraceuticals.com
Stay Connected with Exclusive Content & Special Offers:
********: bluestarnutraceuticals
Instagram: @bluestarnutraceuticals
YouTube: bluestarnutraceuticals
-
-
11-04-2014, 06:53 AM #21
- Join Date: Apr 2012
- Location: South East, United Kingdom (Great Britain)
- Posts: 1,264
- Rep Power: 1928
-
11-04-2014, 08:26 AM #22
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
-
11-04-2014, 09:24 AM #23
-
11-05-2014, 06:29 PM #24
-
-
11-06-2014, 08:31 AM #25
-
11-06-2014, 01:42 PM #26
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
-
11-11-2014, 12:51 AM #27
-
11-11-2014, 03:18 AM #28
- Join Date: Oct 2014
- Location: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- Age: 38
- Posts: 419
- Rep Power: 256
Mostly yes, wtih 2 things i'd like to add:
1: Not everyone will see benefit from creatine suplementation. If you eat enough red meat (beef, veal, pork, horse, etc), some type of fish, and a few other protein sources, and do not overly cook them, supplementing with creatine won't do anything because you have enough in your diet to saturate your muscles. Some peoples also naturally make more of the stuff then others, and don't need as much dietary creatine as others. Actually, most non-vegetarian peoples would get enough creatine from taking 2 grams a day. it is however incredibly cheap and taking more then needed will in no way harm you.
2: The statement on mass gain is a bit unclear. Creatine will get you on average a 3-5 lbs mass increase in the first 4-5 weeks, slightly more for bigger guys, but all of it is intramuscular water weight. Creatine has no effect on muscular hypertrophy other then allowing a slightly higher workload. It has no anabolic propriety per say. So if you manage to pack on 5 new pounds of muscle fiber in your training year, creatine will have helped slightly, as it provided you with a few more reps on every exercises of every training day, but the proportion of muscles attribuables to these extra reps is kinda small and probably less then 1/4th of a pound on those 5 pounds. But still, it is infinately better then not taking any and having it account for 0/4th of a pound
It's also proven to help with concentration and memory, but that's beside the current point.
-
-
11-11-2014, 04:46 AM #29
- Join Date: Oct 2006
- Location: Guelph, Ontario, Canada
- Age: 51
- Posts: 18,572
- Rep Power: 308961
Similar Threads
-
F.s.u.u
By ArchAngel'73 in forum Over 35 Workout JournalsReplies: 857Last Post: 10-27-2013, 06:42 AM
Bookmarks