User Menu


spacer image
Steroid Laws
 
Steroid Profiles
steroids
 
  Share
Search
Archive
From:
To:

Category: Training / All Categories

Creatine How Can It Help You

Creatine, How Can It Help You?, By: Evan Waters

 

                Creatine is one of the most talked about and most controversial supplements of the past decade.  Use of Creatine has become widespread in men, women, teens, and athletes looking for that extra advantage.  Some will have you believe that Creatine will do nothing but hurt you.  To the contrary, some recent studies have proved otherwise and reassert the great value of Creatine supplementation.  Personally, I like to discuss facts.  I hate hearing stories about a friend’s, father’s, cousin’s, brother and his experiences.  So in this article, I will present plain facts to help quiet the HATERS who are constantly downgrading the effectiveness and safeness of this miracle supplement.

 

Creatine, The Sports Enhancer

                Creatine for some time has been used by athletes to improve performance.  It was reported that the Los Angeles Lakers keep tubs if Creatine in their locker room.  Many collegiate and pro athletes have grown to appreciate the supplement.  First, let’s take a look at how Creatine affects weightlifting then how it affects individual aspects of certain sports.

                In May 2004, a study was done at the Ohio State University of Columbus, Ohio.  They tested the hypothesis that compared to a placebo group a Creatine group would demonstrate improvements in the 1 Repetition Maximum (1RM) on the bench press and be able to perform more work at 70% of the 1RM for the Bench Press.  Thirty-one weight-trained men were randomly assigned in a double-blind manner to a placebo group (multidextran), a Cr group (2.5 g of Cr daily). Baseline data were collected for the bench press 1RM and maximal work completed during a fatigue set at 70% of the 1RM. Following 10 days of Creatine supplementation, follow-up tests were completed for the dependent variables.  The Creatine group has significantly larger increases in work, both absolutely and relatively, when compared with the placebo group. This study raises the possibility that a low dose of Creatine may be an effective means of enhancing performance after short-term ingestion.  Not this is any new news but it definitely backs up the theory that Creatine supplementation help weight lifters significantly. 

In a review done in 2004, The University of Connecticut and Bloomsburg University worked together to analyze the data collectively on the combined effects of Creatine supplementation and resistance training on muscle strength and weightlifting performance. The effects of gender, interindividual variability, training status, and possible mechanisms of action were discussed also. Of the 22 studies reviewed, the average increase in muscle strength (1, 3, or 10 repetition maximum [RM]) following Creatine supplementation plus resistance training was 8% greater than the average increase in muscle strength following placebo ingestion during resistance training (20 vs. 12%). Similarly, the average increase in weightlifting performance (maximal repetitions at a given percent of maximal strength) following Creatine supplementation plus resistance training was 14% greater than the average increase in weightlifting performance following placebo ingestion during resistance training (26 vs. 12%). The increase in bench press 1RM ranged from 3 to 45%, and the improvement in weightlifting performance in the bench press ranged from 16 to 43%. Thus there is substantial evidence to indicate that Creatine supplementation during resistance training is more effective at increasing muscle strength and weightlifting performance than resistance training alone.

So by now, we pretty much know the effects of Creatine on weightlifting.  Now we are left to ponder whether it helps sports and/or the attributes of.  In February 2004 a study was conducted at a Sports Medicine Institute in Yugoslavia to examine the effects of acute Creatine-monohydrate supplementation on soccer-specific performance in young soccer players. Twenty male soccer players (16.6 /- 1.9 years) participated in the study and were matched and allocated to 2 randomly assigned trials: ingesting Creatine-monohydrate supplement (3 x 10-g doses) or placebo for 7 days. Before and after the supplementation protocol, each subject underwent a series of soccer-specific skill tests: dribble test, sprint-power test, endurance test, and vertical jump test. Specific dribble test times improved significantly in the Creatine group (13.0 /- 1.5 vs. 10.2 /- 1.8 s; p < .05) after supplementation protocol. Sprint-power test times were significantly improved after Creatine-monohydrate supplementation (2.7 /- 0.4 vs. 2.2 /- 0.5 s; p < .05) as well as vertical jump height (49.2 /- 5.9 vs. 55.1 /- 6.3 cm; p < .05) in Creatine trial. Furthermore, dribble and power test times, along with vertical jump height, were superior in Creatine versus placebo trial (p < .05) at post-supplementation performance.  This study helps to prove the greatness of the supplement.  No extra training was done and yet performance increased.  Soccer may not be the only sport Creatine serves benefits for.  A study in Turkey proved that short-term high dose oral Creatine supplementation has an ergogenic effect on anaerobic capacity of elite wrestlers.

 

Creatine, Is It Worth the Risk?

So you have read conclusive evidence that supplementing with Creatine can and will help you be stronger and faster.  “What’s the catch?”  Ok, ok.  I’ll give in.  Unlike what many websites or people will tell you, there are some side effects of Creatine that aren’t in your favor.  In rare cases, Creatine supplementation can cause Kidney Stones.  One may notice additional gas or bloating.  When I first started supplementing with Creatine I experienced bloating for the first week of use, but since then I have felt no ill-effects.  Some will also say that Creatine can cause muscle cramping; however there is a lack of research that concludes this.  Some are concerned with how the heart reacts to supplementation of Creatine Monohydrate.  This has yet to be thoroughly researched.

However, this is just what some say.  Others will argue differently. In a three-year study designed to find out whether these Creatine side effects really do exist, Creatine was found to have no effect on the incidence of injury or cramping in a group of American footballers   In addition, Carefully controlled studies over the short- (five days), medium- (nine weeks) and long-term (up to five years) have yet to demonstrate that Creatine supplementation has any adverse effects on blood pressure, kidney or liver function in healthy individuals.

With so much evidence pointing either way, it is the consumer that must take the educated decision.

 

Conclusion

Creatine’s positive effects on weightlifting and sporting activities have long been known and have been re-avowed in recent studies and reviews.  It has been shown to have anywhere from slight to marginal effect of performance.  However, there is also some posed risk with supplementing with Creatine.  Still there are studies that prove its safeness without much negative effects.  It should be noted that side effects are rare with Creatine.  However, it should also be noted that hundreds of people die annually from complications with aspirin and acetaminophen.  When all is said and done, it is your choice whether the risk is worth the reward.  For me and many other Creatine users, the gains outweighed the risks.

Other articles by Evan Waters



 

© 2000-2024 Steroid.com By viewing this page you agree and understand our Privacy Policy and Disclaimer. return to top of page
Anabolic Steroids
 
Anabolic Review