Creatine: Dose, Benefits & Safety | Dr. Rhonda Patrick & Dr. Andrew Huberman
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I want to ask you about creatine.
>> Yeah.
>> I'm 50. I started taking weight training
and running when I was like 16 maybe.
Yeah. And I started taking creatine cuz
back then I was skinny. I wanted to put
on muscle. I think creatine was sort of
first discussed or released back then
when I was maybe 18 or something like
that. Something like that. 18 19. Um so
I've been taking a long long time.
>> Yeah.
>> 5 to 10 grams. But the original
protocol, which nobody does anymore, but
I confess I still do it because I enjoy
it, was to take five grams three to five
times per day. There was this loading
phase and you would mix it with a little
bit of grape juice cuz the idea was you
were supposed to spike your insulin and
then you get more into the muscles and
then you had a maintenance dose which
was five grams per day. Um, and the idea
back then was that you need to do a wash
out every 20 weeks or so where you just
stop taking it, you urinate out a bunch
of water, and then you re reload. And I
confess, I've continued to do this minus
the grape juice, but occasionally I'll
do the grape juice thing. I don't think
there's any real merit to the loading
phase, maintenance phase idea. But back
then and still now, I feel like creatine
has made me feel great, um, stronger.
Um, I did I wasn't aware of the
cognitive benefits. They weren't being
studied back then.
>> They weren't being studied back then.
But what are your thoughts on why
creatine suddenly has become this like
banner supplements? It's like supplement
of the year. We should start a
supplement of the year thing, right? For
a while, I think vitamin D and melatonin
came first.
>> Um, and we'll have to figure out what
years those were. Then, uh, I feel like
creatine got supplement of the year for
2026 is unless something else comes
along. So creatine supplement of the
year 2026 even though it's been around
for a long long time. What do you think
happened?
>> Well, so first I want to talk about your
loading phase and I like that was really
for the studies that were being done,
right? Because if you're taking five
grams a day of creatine, it takes about
three to four weeks for your for your
muscle creatine stores to become
saturated and researchers aren't going
to do a study where they wait that long.
So the loading phase really was just
>> So that's what inspired it.
>> Yeah. It was it's in this isolated
bubble of in the experimental protocol,
but like in the real world, you have
three weeks or if you're like an athlete
and you hadn't, you know, taken the
creatine, you don't have your creatine
stores up and you have to quickly
rapidly
>> Got it. I was just amazed at how quickly
it worked. I I I might be a
hyperresponder, but I legitimately put
on I realized some of it was water or
most of it was water, but somewhere
between probably 4 and 8 lbs of of water
in the muscle mass. I don't want to call
it lean mass because it's, you know,
it's water in the muscle. Um, but I I
just was I was like, "Oh my goodness,
this is crazy, you know, and um and then
people thought maybe it was a steroid,
it's not a steroid, maybe it's bad for
your kidneys." Turns out it's safe for
your kidneys and most everyone um pretty
remarkable molecule.
>> Yeah. I mean, obviously creatine is
stored as creatine phosphate in our in
our cells. We make to some degree
between 1 to three grams of creatine a
day. Our liver, our brain also makes it.
It's used to make energy and so your
muscles, if you're working out, you're
really consuming a lot of energy, right?
It's very energetically demanding. So
having the creatine stores higher in
your muscle is beneficial because one,
you're going to be able to increase your
training volume, right? So it's not like
creatine is anabolic in the sense that
protein or amino acids are, right? It's
not like directly affecting muscle
protein synthesis. It's just helping you
train more, getting more reps in, you
know, whatever it is, training, your
training volume's going up. And because
your training volume's going up, then
you're obviously putting more stress on
your muscles, which is going to lead to
increased muscle protein synthesis. And,
you know, obviously there's water
probably as well. That said, you know,
you asked me, you know, what happened.
So, I got interested in creatine back in
20 when I started basically weight
training and obviously I'd heard about
it forever. never took it. And um as I
started to get into resistance training,
I was like, I better start taking this.
This is I'm like in this in this world
now and started doing some research on
taking it. So I was taking the five
grams a day because that's really what
most of the studies show creatine
monohydrate. That's the most
wellressearched form of creatine. And I
was taking five grams a day
>> because I was interested in improving my
my training volume and and getting the
the benefits of it, right? Um, and then
I had Darren Cando on the podcast. Uh,
that was in 2024 I think it was. And,
um, once I had started getting into the
creatine research, I the brain stuff
started has been coming out over the
past, you know, few years
>> and that's for me become very
interesting. I remember the first time I
heard about it years ago, it was like,
oh, it's it's helping improve cognitive
function in older older, you know,
people. Yeah, the phosphor creatine
system seems to be somewhat um biased
towards fourbrain structures. You know,
I mean obviously it's in lots of brain
areas, but that there might be a heavier
reliance on it for
>> brain areas that are associated with
strategic planning and you know, working
memory and Yeah, if you if you were to
sort of just map the the the sort of
density of usage of the phosphocreatine
system, you'd you'd see a frontal bias
for sure.
>> Okay.
>> Yeah. Um well anyways that's kind of
where my interest in in you know kind of
diving deeper. Anything that's helping
the brain is interesting to me as I know
to you as well.
>> And um and so I
>> learned a lot from this podcast I did
with Darren Kando. He you know
researches creatine and collaborates
with a lot of different researchers that
are doing you know research on the brain
and muscle and you know lots the bone.
Turns out it's beneficial for the bone
as well. But the brain it's interesting.
They also make creatine in the brain,
but um it's not like so it's kind of
like the muscle, right? You're not just
going to if you take creatine, you don't
work out, you're not going to you're not
going to get any increase in lean mass,
right? It's not going to do much of
anything because you're not putting in
the work. I think the same goes with the
brain as well, where it's like
researchers started to find out that
well, you can't just take creatine and
it's going to enhance cognitive
function. It's in the background of
stressing the brain, right? you're
stressing your muscles by a workout.
Same goes for the brain. It's like in
these situations of stress, whether
that's sleep deprivation, whether it's,
you know, a traumatic brain injury. I
mean, I would argue, you know, there's a
lot of psychological stress, depression,
constantly using your brain like you and
I right now in this conversation. We're
we're learning, we're thinking. I mean,
it is stressful on the brain, right? So,
I mean, I am obviously speculating here
and taking taking and extrapolating,
right? I'm not saying that there's
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