Creatine Expert: Creatine Is The Secret To Weight Loss - Dr. Darren Candow
Discovered in 1832 and ignored for decades, creatine is now emerging as one of the most versatile nutrients on the planet — with benefits extending far beyond the gym. But a curious paradox exists: the brain makes its own creatine, the muscle stores 95% of it, yet most people may need far more than they're getting. Dr. Darren Candow, who has published over 120 papers on creatine alone, reveals that stressed brains, aging bones, sleep-deprived students, and menopausal women all respond differently — and the dosing dilemma is real. Five persistent myths still keep people away, and the gap between what creatine can do and what people believe it does has never been wider.
Ключевые выводы
Creatine does not damage kidneys, cause hair loss, or bloat you — these myths stem from outdated studies and misunderstandings; the safety profile is exceptional across thousands of trials.
For muscle and performance, 5 grams daily is enough; for bone health in postmenopausal women, 8–12 grams; for a metabolically stressed brain (sleep deprivation, jet lag, Alzheimer's), 20 grams or more may be required.
The brain makes its own creatine, so a healthy, well-rested brain may not need supplementation — but stress, poor sleep, shift work, or neurodegenerative disease dramatically increase demand.
Creatine supplementation combined with resistance training significantly improves lean mass, strength, and functional ability in aging adults, and may slow bone mineral density loss in postmenopausal women.
Vegans and vegetarians respond best to creatine because they synthesize it naturally but get zero from diet; children may benefit from at least 1 gram per day for bone and muscle development.
Вкратце
Creatine is not just for bodybuilders: it's a multi-tool for muscle, bone, brain health, and longevity — safe across all ages, effective at surprisingly low doses (3–10 g/day for most), and perhaps the single best-researched supplement available, yet most people still don't take it or take it incorrectly.
The Five Myths Keeping People From Creatine
The Dosing Dilemma: Muscle, Bone, and Brain Need Different Amounts
One size does not fit all — stress level determines dose.
Why Creatine Monohydrate Is Still King
All the evidence, none of the hype — stick with the original.
Why Creatine Monohydrate Is Still King
Creatine monohydrate (creatine + one water molecule) is identical to what your liver and brain produce. Despite dozens of «new» market forms like hydrochloride or buffered creatine, none have been proven safer or more effective. Look for Creapure (German-certified) and third-party NSF certification to avoid contaminants like lead or arsenic. Over 90% of off-the-shelf creatine tested by independent labs failed to contain the labeled dose.
Creatine and the Brain: From Sleep Deprivation to Alzheimer's
A healthy brain doesn't need it, but stress changes everything.
The brain makes its own creatine and accounts for 20% of the body's daily energy expenditure despite being only 2 kg. In a well-rested, low-stress state, it synthesizes enough. But night shift workers, medical residents on 24-hour calls, athletes under competitive pressure, university students cramming for exams, and individuals with neurodegenerative disease experience metabolic brain stress — and creatine stores plummet.
Creatine struggles to cross the blood–brain barrier, which is why acute doses of 20–30 grams are required to raise brain creatine levels measurably. A 2023 German study found that 30 grams given to young adults deprived of sleep for 21 hours offset cognitive decline and improved performance on tasks like the Stroop test (a grueling 90-minute color-word mismatch challenge). A landmark 8-week trial in Alzheimer's patients showed that 20 grams daily increased brain creatine by 11% and significantly improved memory and cognition scores.
Creatine also shows promise for clinical depression and anxiety. Studies pairing creatine with SSRIs or cognitive behavioral therapy found doubled remission rates in women with major depression. In all cases, reduced brain creatine was the common denominator — and supplementation acted as a rescue, not a booster.
Muscle, Bone, and Longevity: Why Resistance Training Is the Hammer in Your Toolbox
Creatine works, but only if you lift.
Who Responds Best — and Who Should Definitely Take It
Vegans, women, and older adults see the most dramatic effects.
Vegans & Vegetarians They synthesize 1–3 g/day but get zero from diet (creatine exists only in animal flesh). Supplementation produces the most dramatic strength and performance gains of any population.
Postmenopausal Women Estrogen regulates creatine metabolism, so declining estrogen during menopause increases demand. Creatine helps preserve bone density and muscle mass during this vulnerable window.
Older Adults (50+) After age 40, muscle mass declines ~1% per year, and strength declines 1–3% per year. Creatine + resistance training arrests this decline and improves functional tasks like sit-to-stand.
Athletes in High-Stress or High-Intensity Sports Soccer, rugby, MMA, sprinting — any sport requiring repeated bursts of power. Creatine maintains ATP (energy currency) during anaerobic effort and reduces inflammation markers after endurance events.
People Under Cognitive Stress Shift workers, medical residents, pilots, students, anyone sleep-deprived or jet-lagged. Acute high doses (20+ g) can offset cognitive decline and improve task performance.
What Creatine Won't Do (And What It Will)
It's a performance maintainer, not a miracle drug.
“Creatine is not like caffeine — you won't feel an immediate effect. Unlike acetaminophen or ibuprofen, it doesn't directly block inflammation as a drug. It's Robin, not Batman. It comes to the rescue to maintain ATP, the energy currency of all our cells. And most people fall into the stressed environment — that's where creatine comes to the rescue.”
The Toolbox: Where Creatine Fits in a Longevity Plan
Люди
Глоссарий
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