Creatine is a sports supplement used in a variety of
different sports and activities from bodybuilding to the full roster of
athletics and Olympic sports. The idea of creatine is essentially to improve
your energy efficiency, and while the results aren't going to turn you into a
marathon runner over night, they are effective enough to be used by most
professional athletes.
When buying creatine
for yourself the question though is what kind of creatine to buy, and whether
there is any difference between them. Creatine varies in several ways – for
instance you can get creatine in both liquid ('serum') and power forms which
also affects how it works and just how effective it is. Here we will look at
which is more effective and how to go about choosing the creatine for you.
How Creatine Works
First we will look briefly at how creatine works.
Essentially in order for our body to move and perform its basic tasks it
requires something called ATP. This stands for 'adenosine triphosphate' and is
actually simply the name for three bonded phosphate molecules. These bonds are
incredibly powerful and when they are broken that's what releases the usable
energy for the body to convert into movement or the range of important
processes it carries out. When you eat a banana for energy this works by being
broken down into glucose, but that in turn is broken down into ATP.
When that ATP is broken down in order provide us
with energy, that means that those bonds are broken and the phosphates are left
to float freely. One phosphate is called 'adenosine monophosphate', whereas two
phosphates are known as 'adenosine diphosphate' – or AMP and ADP respectively.
These two substances are useless to us normally and so the body then looks for
the more ATP instead in the fat stores etc which is a slower process of getting
energy and will mean that we take longer to generate the energy (and start
panting etc).
Creatine is produced by the body and most of it is
found in the skeletal muscle. Its job then is to take that AMP and ADP and to
recombine it to create ATP. What this does then is to essentially 'recycle' the
useable energy in your muscles.
What that also means is that your muscles have
slightly more energy already in them so that they can work longer before your
body has to move on to the less efficient aerobic system for energy. At the
same time it also has a very useful side effect which is that it can increase
water retention. For 'bulking' bodybuilders, and for those running long
distance this is very helpful, but for 'cutting' and slimming down it is of
course less helpful.
Powder Versus Liquid
So the question is, will powder or liquid better
serve you in the goal to increase energy and water retention? Well this is
something to which there is currently no clear cut answer and it is rather a
source of debate which is still ongoing – both liquid and powder creatine have
their proponents and opponents respectively, though powdered creatine has been
around a lot longer and so has more supporting evidence and a longer history of
prior success.
The concept behind this relatively new liquid
creatine is that it might increase absorption into the muscles – in other words
increasing the amount of 'bioavailable' creatine rather than just passing
through the system without having any effect (as is sadly the case with many
supplements). However it is possible that liquid creatine might actually have
the opposite effect – the reason being that the process of turning creatine
into liquid form could degrade large amounts of the substance into 'creatinine'
which is a useless and unstable byproduct that would pass straight through the
system. One study of liquid creatine was particularly damning and seemed to
show that consuming liquid creatine would have no effect on the amounts of
creatine available in the body. This piece of research came from a
not-particularly reliable source, and it's unlikely that the situation is that
extreme – however until more evidence is released in support of liquid creatine
it makes sense to stick with powder (particularly as you generally get more for
your money).
Choosing Creatine
Powdered creatine conversely has been used for a
long time and generally with success. That said there are still differences
between various forms of powdered creatine and some are more effective than
others. The best manufacturers of creatine can improve absorption by ensuring
the molecules are as small and light as possible. At the same time you should
avoid products that lump creatine in with a range of other effects. For
instance it is common to find protein shakes that come with creatine included,
and while this might seem like a convenient one-stop-shop for creatine, it is
in fact a bad thing as it makes it more difficult for your body to absorb.
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