Abstract

Creatine has been considered an effective ergogenic aid for several decades; it can help athletes engaged in a variety of sports and obtain performance gains. Creatine supplementation increases muscle creatine stores; several factors have been identified that may modify the intramuscular increase and subsequent performance benefits, including baseline muscle Cr content, type II muscle fibre content and size, habitual dietary intake of Cr, aging, and exercise. Timing of creatine supplementation in relation to exercise has recently been proposed as an important consideration to optimise muscle loading and performance gains, although current consensus is lacking regarding the ideal ingestion time. Research has shifted towards comparing creatine supplementation strategies pre-, during-, or post-exercise. Emerging evidence suggests greater benefits when creatine is consumed after exercise compared to pre-exercise, although methodological limitations currently preclude solid conclusions. Furthermore, physiological and mechanistic data are lacking, in regard to claims that the timing of creatine supplementation around exercise moderates gains in muscle creatine and exercise performance. This review discusses novel scientific evidence on the timing of creatine intake, the possible mechanisms that may be involved, and whether the timing of creatine supplementation around exercise is truly a real concern.

Highlights

  • Athletes are interested in nutritional strategies that are aimed at enhancing exercise performance

  • Several factors could influence the individual intramuscular increase in TCr and subsequent performance benefits as a consequence of Cr supplementation, including baseline muscle Cr content, type II muscle fibre content and size, and habitual dietary intake of Cr and aging [9,10]

  • The results of this study suggest that when intermittent low doses of Cr are consumed during chronic resistance training for 12 weeks, the timing of supplementation pre- or post-exercise does not exert differential effects on strength, hypertrophy, and body composition in healthy older adults

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Summary

A Real Concern?

Felipe Ribeiro 1,2 , Igor Longobardi 1 , Pedro Perim 1 , Breno Duarte 1 , Pedro Ferreira 1,2 , Bruno Gualano 1,3 , Hamilton Roschel 1 and Bryan Saunders 1,4, *.

Introduction
Creatine Supplementation
Creatine Concentration in the Bloodstream and Training Duration
Future Directions for Research
Findings
Conclusions

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