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Creatine: Dose, Benefits & Safety | Dr. Rhonda Patrick & Dr. Andrew Huberman

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0:00

I want to ask you about creatine.

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>> Yeah.

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>> I'm 50. I started taking weight training

0:05

and running when I was like 16 maybe.

0:08

Yeah. And I started taking creatine cuz

0:11

back then I was skinny. I wanted to put

0:13

on muscle. I think creatine was sort of

0:15

first discussed or released back then

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when I was maybe 18 or something like

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that. Something like that. 18 19. Um so

0:22

I've been taking a long long time.

0:24

>> Yeah.

0:24

>> 5 to 10 grams. But the original

0:27

protocol, which nobody does anymore, but

0:30

I confess I still do it because I enjoy

0:32

it, was to take five grams three to five

0:36

times per day. There was this loading

0:38

phase and you would mix it with a little

0:41

bit of grape juice cuz the idea was you

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were supposed to spike your insulin and

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then you get more into the muscles and

0:45

then you had a maintenance dose which

0:47

was five grams per day. Um, and the idea

0:51

back then was that you need to do a wash

0:53

out every 20 weeks or so where you just

0:55

stop taking it, you urinate out a bunch

0:57

of water, and then you re reload. And I

0:59

confess, I've continued to do this minus

1:01

the grape juice, but occasionally I'll

1:02

do the grape juice thing. I don't think

1:04

there's any real merit to the loading

1:06

phase, maintenance phase idea. But back

1:10

then and still now, I feel like creatine

1:12

has made me feel great, um, stronger.

1:15

Um, I did I wasn't aware of the

1:17

cognitive benefits. They weren't being

1:19

studied back then.

1:19

>> They weren't being studied back then.

1:21

But what are your thoughts on why

1:23

creatine suddenly has become this like

1:26

banner supplements? It's like supplement

1:28

of the year. We should start a

1:30

supplement of the year thing, right? For

1:31

a while, I think vitamin D and melatonin

1:33

came first.

1:34

>> Um, and we'll have to figure out what

1:36

years those were. Then, uh, I feel like

1:39

creatine got supplement of the year for

1:40

2026 is unless something else comes

1:42

along. So creatine supplement of the

1:45

year 2026 even though it's been around

1:48

for a long long time. What do you think

1:49

happened?

1:50

>> Well, so first I want to talk about your

1:52

loading phase and I like that was really

1:54

for the studies that were being done,

1:55

right? Because if you're taking five

1:57

grams a day of creatine, it takes about

1:59

three to four weeks for your for your

2:02

muscle creatine stores to become

2:03

saturated and researchers aren't going

2:05

to do a study where they wait that long.

2:07

So the loading phase really was just

2:09

>> So that's what inspired it.

2:11

>> Yeah. It was it's in this isolated

2:12

bubble of in the experimental protocol,

2:15

but like in the real world, you have

2:17

three weeks or if you're like an athlete

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and you hadn't, you know, taken the

2:20

creatine, you don't have your creatine

2:22

stores up and you have to quickly

2:23

rapidly

2:24

>> Got it. I was just amazed at how quickly

2:25

it worked. I I I might be a

2:27

hyperresponder, but I legitimately put

2:29

on I realized some of it was water or

2:31

most of it was water, but somewhere

2:33

between probably 4 and 8 lbs of of water

2:38

in the muscle mass. I don't want to call

2:40

it lean mass because it's, you know,

2:41

it's water in the muscle. Um, but I I

2:45

just was I was like, "Oh my goodness,

2:47

this is crazy, you know, and um and then

2:49

people thought maybe it was a steroid,

2:51

it's not a steroid, maybe it's bad for

2:52

your kidneys." Turns out it's safe for

2:54

your kidneys and most everyone um pretty

2:57

remarkable molecule.

2:58

>> Yeah. I mean, obviously creatine is

3:00

stored as creatine phosphate in our in

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our cells. We make to some degree

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between 1 to three grams of creatine a

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day. Our liver, our brain also makes it.

3:08

It's used to make energy and so your

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muscles, if you're working out, you're

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really consuming a lot of energy, right?

3:15

It's very energetically demanding. So

3:18

having the creatine stores higher in

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your muscle is beneficial because one,

3:23

you're going to be able to increase your

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training volume, right? So it's not like

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creatine is anabolic in the sense that

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protein or amino acids are, right? It's

3:29

not like directly affecting muscle

3:32

protein synthesis. It's just helping you

3:35

train more, getting more reps in, you

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know, whatever it is, training, your

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training volume's going up. And because

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your training volume's going up, then

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you're obviously putting more stress on

3:45

your muscles, which is going to lead to

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increased muscle protein synthesis. And,

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you know, obviously there's water

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probably as well. That said, you know,

3:53

you asked me, you know, what happened.

3:54

So, I got interested in creatine back in

3:58

20 when I started basically weight

4:00

training and obviously I'd heard about

4:01

it forever. never took it. And um as I

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started to get into resistance training,

4:06

I was like, I better start taking this.

4:08

This is I'm like in this in this world

4:10

now and started doing some research on

4:11

taking it. So I was taking the five

4:13

grams a day because that's really what

4:15

most of the studies show creatine

4:17

monohydrate. That's the most

4:18

wellressearched form of creatine. And I

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was taking five grams a day

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>> because I was interested in improving my

4:25

my training volume and and getting the

4:27

the benefits of it, right? Um, and then

4:31

I had Darren Cando on the podcast. Uh,

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that was in 2024 I think it was. And,

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um, once I had started getting into the

4:39

creatine research, I the brain stuff

4:43

started has been coming out over the

4:45

past, you know, few years

4:47

>> and that's for me become very

4:49

interesting. I remember the first time I

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heard about it years ago, it was like,

4:51

oh, it's it's helping improve cognitive

4:53

function in older older, you know,

4:55

people. Yeah, the phosphor creatine

4:56

system seems to be somewhat um biased

5:00

towards fourbrain structures. You know,

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I mean obviously it's in lots of brain

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areas, but that there might be a heavier

5:05

reliance on it for

5:08

>> brain areas that are associated with

5:09

strategic planning and you know, working

5:11

memory and Yeah, if you if you were to

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sort of just map the the the sort of

5:15

density of usage of the phosphocreatine

5:17

system, you'd you'd see a frontal bias

5:19

for sure.

5:20

>> Okay.

5:20

>> Yeah. Um well anyways that's kind of

5:22

where my interest in in you know kind of

5:26

diving deeper. Anything that's helping

5:28

the brain is interesting to me as I know

5:31

to you as well.

5:32

>> And um and so I

5:36

>> learned a lot from this podcast I did

5:37

with Darren Kando. He you know

5:38

researches creatine and collaborates

5:40

with a lot of different researchers that

5:42

are doing you know research on the brain

5:44

and muscle and you know lots the bone.

5:46

Turns out it's beneficial for the bone

5:47

as well. But the brain it's interesting.

5:50

They also make creatine in the brain,

5:51

but um it's not like so it's kind of

5:54

like the muscle, right? You're not just

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going to if you take creatine, you don't

5:57

work out, you're not going to you're not

5:58

going to get any increase in lean mass,

6:01

right? It's not going to do much of

6:02

anything because you're not putting in

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the work. I think the same goes with the

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brain as well, where it's like

6:09

researchers started to find out that

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well, you can't just take creatine and

6:13

it's going to enhance cognitive

6:14

function. It's in the background of

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stressing the brain, right? you're

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stressing your muscles by a workout.

6:19

Same goes for the brain. It's like in

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these situations of stress, whether

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that's sleep deprivation, whether it's,

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you know, a traumatic brain injury. I

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mean, I would argue, you know, there's a

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lot of psychological stress, depression,

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constantly using your brain like you and

6:37

I right now in this conversation. We're

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we're learning, we're thinking. I mean,

6:40

it is stressful on the brain, right? So,

6:43

I mean, I am obviously speculating here

6:45

and taking taking and extrapolating,

6:47

right? I'm not saying that there's

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