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Creatine may be a powerful new ally in the fight against depression Adding creatine to traditional antidepressants significantly speeds recovery and reduces symptoms—especially among females with clinical depression Supplementing with creatine increases brain energy, restores depleted brain creatine stores common in depression, may boost molecules like BDNF, and reduces...

220,303 просмотров • 1 год назад •via X (Twitter)

Комментарии: 8

Фото профиля FoundMyFitness Clips
FoundMyFitness Clips1 год назад

From a new episode of the FoundMyFitness podcast with creatine researcher @darrencandow • How creatine supports bone and brain health • Optimal timing — and if it needs to be cycled • How to pick the best creatine supplement And more

Фото профиля Naveen Sankar S
Naveen Sankar S1 год назад

💊 Vitamin K supplementation may ease nocturnal leg cramps in older adults! 🌙 A study shows significant reductions in frequency, intensity, and duration of cramps with regular use. 🔗 #HealthyAging #Nutrition #LegCramps

Фото профиля Nicholas Fabiano, MD
Nicholas Fabiano, MD1 год назад

Adding creatine to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) also leads to an improved antidepressant response

Фото профиля FoundMyFitness Clips
FoundMyFitness Clips1 год назад

Get "The Cognitive Enhancement Blueprint" Packed with Rhonda Patrick's specific protocols for boosting BDNF with exercise, omega-3s, and heat stress 9 pages Totally free Sign up here:

Фото профиля Sierra Oscar 2-0-1
Sierra Oscar 2-0-11 год назад

I wonder what the effects of stacking creatine with psilocybin would be.

Фото профиля Brinkie Noderunner
Brinkie Noderunner1 год назад

If I take to much my stomach gets cranky..

Фото профиля Emi
Emi1 год назад

Creatine is becoming somewhat magical at this point.

Фото профиля MoodAngel 🟧🟪
MoodAngel 🟧🟪1 год назад

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Похожие видео

Creatine isn’t just for athletes. A growing body of scientific evidence now shows creatine helps preserve muscle during aging, maintains bone density, improves cognition (especially during stress), and speeds muscle recovery after intense exercise. To explore the mechanisms, optimal dosing strategies, and practical considerations, and more, I invited a leading creatine researcher Dr. Darren Candow (Darren Candow, PhD, CSEP-CEP, FISSN) onto the podcast. Even if you’re not an athlete—or you’ve dismissed creatine as a muscle supplement—you need to listen to this episode. Links to YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify in the comments. Timestamps: 0:00 - Introduction 0:56 - What makes creatine effective for exercise performance? 4:23 - The loss of explosive power with aging 5:59 - How creatine speeds up recovery between sets 8:36 - Two ways creatine boosts muscle strength 10:34 - Why creatine might not speed typical weight-training recovery 13:01 - Anti-catabolic effects 13:38 - Why do men and women respond differently? 15:12 - Dietary creatine vs. supplementation 15:59 - Is creatine supplementation necessary—or optional? 17:27 - Why plant-based may benefit most 18:38 - Should creatine dosage change with age? 19:23 - Loading vs. daily dosing 22:20 - Why 5 grams might not be enough—other tissues 24:11 - Can creatine prevent bone loss—even without weight training? 24:32 - How creatine supports osteoblast activity 26:13 - Preventing hip fractures with creatine 28:55 - Creatine vs. bisphosphonates 32:43 - Why creatine isn’t just for weightlifters 35:14 - Why stressed brains benefit most 37:19 - Why brain aging accelerates demand 40:16 - Why 10g per day might be the optimal dose 42:07 - Why creatine counteracts sleep deprivation 45:16 - Before vs. after concussion 47:39 - Should dosage be adjusted by weight? 49:01 - Does creatine improve sleep on training days? 51:56 - Creatine for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s 53:29 - Can creatine help with depression and anxiety? 56:46 - Creatine and glutamine for preventing respiratory illness 59:02 - Why creatine may enhance endothelial health and circulation 1:00:26 - Creatine’s role in cardiometabolic health 1:02:07 - When does loading actually make sense? 1:03:12 - Preserving muscle and enhancing recovery after injury 1:06:07 - Is creatine effective without exercise? 1:08:23 - Why creatine might improve male fertility 1:10:19 - Is it safe for children? 1:13:43 - Creatine supplementation during pregnancy 1:15:15 - Could creatine boost motor skills in kids? 1:15:55 - Creatine monohydrate vs. the rest 1:20:37 - How to avoid digestive issues with creatine supplementation 1:23:18 - Does timing matter—and should you cycle it? 1:24:54 - Should you take creatine every day—or only workout days? 1:25:39 - Why caffeine might blunt the effects 1:28:43 - Does creatine increase body fat—or is that a myth? 1:29:30 - Preventing cramps (the hydration myth) 1:30:55 - Why creatine won’t damage your kidneys 1:33:21 - Why creatine is linked (wrongly?) to baldness 1:36:44 - Debunking myths—sleep, cancer, urination 1:40:01 - How creatine affects homocysteine levels 1:42:54 - Creatine and protein—the ideal post-workout pair? 1:45:48 - How to pick the best creatine supplement 1:48:08 - What to know about micronized creatine

Dr. Rhonda Patrick

463,757 просмотров • 1 год назад

Use creatine to protect your brain from head injuries: Repeated head injuries can lead to second-impact syndrome, where a subsequent injury before full recovery causes rapid and potentially permanent brain damage. This is a significant risk for athletes, military, or anyone prone to traumatic brain injury (TBI) or concussions. But here's the good news: research has shown that creatine supplementation can help mitigate the damage caused by second-impact syndrome. In fact, studies have found that creatine depletion prior to additional impacts can worsen the damage to your brain. So, what should you do? If you do experience a head injury, it's essential to replenish your creatine stores as quickly as possible. Creatine monohydrate is a good option, as it's the most researched and widely used form in studies, and it's also one of the most affordable and available options. Creating a regular creatine supplementation routine can be beneficial for overall health and wellness, regardless of your risk level for head injuries. You can obtain creatine through both food sources and supplements. While it is possible to get creatine from food, particularly from meat sources (which contain around 400-600mg of creatine per 100g or 3.5oz serving), it can be challenging to achieve the high dosages needed through diet alone. Most studies on creatine monohydrate for brain injuries have used high dosages of around 20g per day, which is significantly higher than the typical dosages used for performance benefits. As a preventative measure, a daily dose of 5-10g may be sufficient for most people. However, if you know you'll be at risk of exposure to head impacts, you may want to increase your dosage to 20-30g per day for a week, split into multiple doses. Remember, the primary goal should always be to minimize the number of head impacts and injuries in the first place.

Andy Galpin, PhD

137,470 просмотров • 1 год назад

Creatine is for Brain Power, not Just Muscle Power A New RCT just dropped looking at creatine hydrochloride (HCl) and creatine ethyl ester (CEE) on cognitive outcomes (PMID: 40854087). Researchers gave perimenopausal women 8 weeks of either low-dose creatine HCl (750 mg or 1.5 g / day), a blend of HCl + CEE, or placebo. 👉 The 1.5 g HCl group showed small but significant improvements in reaction time and even a ~16% increase in frontal brain creatine levels on MRS scans. The HCl + CEE combo didn’t outperform HCl alone. All forms were well-tolerated and there were no serious side effects. The results add to growing evidence that creatine supports cognition—not just strength, hypertrophy, and power—but let’s keep perspective: ⚠️ Creatine ethyl ester has consistently underperformed in bioavailability studies. Multiple head-to-head trials show it’s rapidly degraded to creatinine in the gut and fails to meaningfully raise muscle creatine compared to creatine monohydrate (PMID:19228401). Creatine HCl seems to dissolve better in water and some anecdotal reports claim it’s easier on digestion for some people, but so far there’s no solid evidence it improves muscle or brain creatine stores beyond what you get with monohydrate. Bottom line: this study is promising for the cognitive benefits of creatine overall, but it doesn’t change the main recommendation Creatine monohydrate is still the gold standard. It’s the form used in hundreds of human RCTs, proven to raise muscle and brain creatine, and it’s cheap. Until stronger data show otherwise, save your money and stick with monohydrate.

Layne Norton, PhD

16,253 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

My top five tips to battle jet lag. 1. Early morning bright light exposure - This must be outside light from the sun. Aim for 30 minutes minimum. Light is the strongest zeitgeber that synchronizes the brain and body with the time zone you are in and resets your biological clock. The bright light signals to the brain that it's morning and time to wake up, and also activates the cortisol awakening response and inhibits melatonin production. 2. Exercise - Another zeitgeber that helps realign your circadian rhythm (your internal clock). Plus, it's great for your health. 3. High-dose creatine - Creatine can help support brain health in the context of stress. Jet lag is a big stress in the brain. Creatine starts to accumulate in the brain at a dose of 10g per day, and studies have found that 20-25g of creatine can improve brain function in the context of sleep deprivation. May not work for everyone but it works for me. 4. Strategic melatonin timing - A small dose of melatonin a couple of hours before you want to sleep helps signal to the brain it’s time to get ready for bed. This really helps when your internal clock thinks it is still daytime. 5. Avoid blue light exposure during the evening - Blue light inhibits melatonin, which is the last thing you want to do in the evening. Melatonin is the hormone that helps make you feel ready to sleep. Dimming lights or blue light-blocking glasses do the trick.

Dr. Rhonda Patrick

86,509 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад

Rhonda Patrick just leveled up her creatine game—and the reasons will make you rethink that standard 5g scoop. She used to do 5g for workouts... now it's 10g EVERY DAY as baseline. Why? Brain saturation. "Once muscles are full at ~5g, the spillover hits the brain"—boosting cognitive function, potentially shielding against brain aging, and even helping depression via better energy production upstairs. Jet-lagged? Sleepless night? Travel wrecking your rhythm? She cranks to 15–20g (sometimes 20–30g in studies) — calls it "speed without the speed," like caffeine minus the crash/jitters. No addiction, but insanely alert, focused, and resilient. Hits hardest under stress/sleep deprivation (research backs it: single high doses reverse 21+ hour wakefulness cognitive hits and can outperform rested performance). Vegan twist: One friend (no meat = zero dietary creatine) went from dragging to "Bruce Banner → Hulk" mode after starting. Vegans/vegetarians often run low—liver makes only so much. Bonus layer: Extra creatine frees up methylation pathways (homocysteine → methionine), gene expression tweaks, brain-wide perks. 3:13 raw clip of Rhonda spilling the science—perfect if you're biohacking focus, longevity, or just surviving modern life chaos. Are you on creatine? Still at 5g? Gone higher for brain gains? Noticed Hulk-level energy when stressed/sleepless? Vegans—game-changer or nah? Drop your protocol/experience below—this one's sparking real convos!

Camus

233,976 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

Creatine is SAFE! CASE CLOSED! I have been saying for years that creatine monohydrate (CM) is the most effective & safest supplement on the market for improving lean mass, strength, performance, & now we have data showing it may improve cognition while decreasing symptoms of depression & possibly protect against traumatic brain injury Myths abound about the safety of CM, with claims that it damages the kidneys, liver, heart, causes bloating, damages the gut, & causes water retention A new meta-analysis (PMID: 40198156) attempted to compile all clinical research that reported side effects & analyze whether or not creatine caused side effects vs placebo The meta included over 26,000 total subjects & the characteristics were as follows: Average intake per day: 12.5g Average duration of use: ~9 weeks (longest was 14 years) Average age: 30 (up to 77) There were 49 total side effects reported, including: palpitations, thromboembolic events, GI distress, muscle cramping, kidney issues, liver enzymes, neoplasm, heart issues, & many others There were NO SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES for any of these side effects between creatine & placebo, indicating that it is unlikely to cause any side effects Additionally, while CM increases total body water, it does NOT increase extracellular water, which means it doesn’t cause edema (PMID: 12937471) Some people report GI issues from CM & for those people, I recommend dividing it up into smaller doses throughout the day It also does NOT cause hair loss (PMID: 40265319) Do not waste your money on forms of creatine other than monohydrate. It is the most studied form by far & is also the least expensive. All other forms (ethyl ester, hydrochloride, buffered, etc) are more expensive (so supplement companies can justify overcharging you) & none of them are more effective than CM & some are less effective (like ethyl ester). PMIDs: 19228401, 39545789, & 22971354) Get the real deal & don’t get overcharged. That’s why my Recovery product from @outworknutritionofficial contains creatine monohydrate so that you get the most effective, tested, & safe form, without overpaying.

Layne Norton, PhD

43,972 просмотров • 11 месяцев назад