Newbie question..........Anyne here ever use....
#2
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I used to use it, in a liquid form. It was for runners though. I didn't notice a big difference. I think that the key is to eat foods with some creatine in them, but more importantly, make sure your body is getting enough protein.
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It makes your bones week. At school one of our best athlets broke his femer because he took creatine. He was a senior too, and was going to state for his 3rd time.
I dont see the advantage
I dont see the advantage
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I have always had good experiences with creatine. It has helped me to build strength in the past. I know some people have complained of digestive problems caused by it, but I've never had any issues. You will retain some water though, make sure you stay hydrated. It's like with anything else though, unless you're busting your butt, it won't do anything but make you poop more.
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#6
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Originally Posted by Warden11
It happened to a guy I knew who knows someone else and heard it from their sister's best friends cousin.
You have never heard that it makes your bones weak? Mabe you should start looking into what your drinking more carfully.
But let me change somthing a little. It has bad effects on young people who have not fully grown. Teens and some young adult in there 20s. Yes it dose work for bodybuilders, but it weakens your bones and to me its pointless to take.
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You have never heard that it makes your bones weak? Mabe you should start looking into what your drinking more carfully.
But let me change somthing a little. It has bad effects on young people who have not fully grown. Teens and some young adult in there 20s. Yes it dose work for bodybuilders, but it weakens your bones and to me its pointless to take.
But let me change somthing a little. It has bad effects on young people who have not fully grown. Teens and some young adult in there 20s. Yes it dose work for bodybuilders, but it weakens your bones and to me its pointless to take.
I have not heard of this with creatine. Creatine is a component used by cells to create ATP in an anaerobic environment. It provides energy for extremely strenuous efforts of less than 10 seconds. There is some concern that it could interfere with kidney function (per my doctor, but I'm a diabetic and this may just be him being overly cautious).
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I've heard the kidney concerns are from taking too much of it as your kidneys have to process the excess as waste.
if you take the proper dosage there is no concern.
take plenty of water with it and you will notice performance gains.
if you take the proper dosage there is no concern.
take plenty of water with it and you will notice performance gains.
#9
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Creatine is natuarly in your body. You get it from fish and stuff, that is what I remmember from one of my old coach. Like anything when you bring too much of somthing into your body you mess it up.
I cant find anything agenst it, there has been no studies on children so there is the possability that it may not cause fragial bones. Im still looking though.
I cant find anything agenst it, there has been no studies on children so there is the possability that it may not cause fragial bones. Im still looking though.
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#11
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A coach said it, therefore it must be true. Nevermind the fact that coaches generally don't know their you know what from a whole in the ground when it comes to supplements.
Ok. The thread linked wasn't real helpful. Isn't leg strength a part of cycling? If you're lifting weights trying to gain strength, creatine can help with that. I'm not advocating the supplement, just stating that I have never had any noticable bad side effects.
Ok. The thread linked wasn't real helpful. Isn't leg strength a part of cycling? If you're lifting weights trying to gain strength, creatine can help with that. I'm not advocating the supplement, just stating that I have never had any noticable bad side effects.
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MAP is not a function of leg strength....have a look at the Tour de France maillot jaune for proof.
Creatine isn't going to help you log 1000km a week and smoke your local criterium scene
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Here are some cycling related links. At the very least the jury is still out on this one. Do I think that cyclists should be loading up on 20g/day? No, but 1-3g/day from food or supplement may be a valuable weapon in the athletes arsenal. Higher dosages may be helpful if worked into a periodization program (extra water weight out of competition won’t hurt).
Improves time to exhaustion at high intensities
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...=pubmed_docsum
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q..._uids=10393351
Improves recovery in cyclists after high intensity efforts.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/q...=pubmed_docsum
Reduced dose creatine helps endurance cyclists deal with midrace surges
https://www.pponline.co.uk/encyc/0438.htm
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#16
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I take 5 grams after strenuous workouts or rides. But I'm a vegetarian, so don't get it from meat sources. It does definitely help with surges and late ride sprints. I tried using bodybuilder doses, but all I got was heavier and crampier, so quit that immediately. I'd say if you're a meat-eater, probably don't bother. If you're a vegetarian, yes, consider it or try it. Low doses like 5-7g/day, when used in a recovery situation, shouldn't have any side effects at all.
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I thought creatine just stored water in your muscle fibres in a glucose suspension that ended up making your muscles LOOK larger but had no real effect on strength.
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I understand the fact that someone who can squat 500 lbs may not be a great cyclist, but how can stronger legs not be beneficial to cycling? That makes no f'n sense to me, I'm not trying to be a dick. I just can't follow that logic. Do you have any proof? Are you saying professional cyclists don't ever lift weights to increase their leg strength?
#19
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I understand the fact that someone who can squat 500 lbs may not be a great cyclist, but how can stronger legs not be beneficial to cycling? That makes no f'n sense to me, I'm not trying to be a dick. I just can't follow that logic. Do you have any proof? Are you saying professional cyclists don't ever lift weights to increase their leg strength?
Most of the winter weight-training programme is to increase muscle-efficiency; being able to generate more power for any given volume of O2. Strength is increased through recruitment of dormant fibres, through increased mitochondria density, etc. You really don't want to increase size and weight too much as that would be detrimental to performance.
It also depends upon the type of events you're doing. A hillclimber will work mainly on their aerobic system and form. A time-trialist will focus on muscle-efficiency and aerodynamics. A sprinter would do some weight-training, much more than the hillclimber or time-trialist. Track sprinters will train almost exclusively in the gym lifting weights.
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I take 5 grams a day
no side effects here. it seems to help with my riding but it could all be in my head
it does however help me with lifting
no side effects here. it seems to help with my riding but it could all be in my head
it does however help me with lifting
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Well, it has more to do with muscle-efficiency rather than pure-strength. Cyclists don't need ultimate high-strength, but they do need medium-high strength for hours on end. So rather than being able to squat 500-lbs, they'd rather be able to squat 400-lbs with 100 reps.
Most of the winter weight-training programme is to increase muscle-efficiency; being able to generate more power for any given volume of O2. Strength is increased through recruitment of dormant fibres, through increased mitochondria density, etc. You really don't want to increase size and weight too much as that would be detrimental to performance.
It also depends upon the type of events you're doing. A hillclimber will work mainly on their aerobic system and form. A time-trialist will focus on muscle-efficiency and aerodynamics. A sprinter would do some weight-training, much more than the hillclimber or time-trialist. Track sprinters will train almost exclusively in the gym lifting weights.
Most of the winter weight-training programme is to increase muscle-efficiency; being able to generate more power for any given volume of O2. Strength is increased through recruitment of dormant fibres, through increased mitochondria density, etc. You really don't want to increase size and weight too much as that would be detrimental to performance.
It also depends upon the type of events you're doing. A hillclimber will work mainly on their aerobic system and form. A time-trialist will focus on muscle-efficiency and aerodynamics. A sprinter would do some weight-training, much more than the hillclimber or time-trialist. Track sprinters will train almost exclusively in the gym lifting weights.
That makes sense. Once again however, that in no way shows that creatine has zero benefits for cyclists.
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My kidney failure was not caused by taking anything, but if my kidney transplant ever fails, maybe I'll see you on dialysis. Creatine? Pardon my French, but are you people nuts! Improve your performance through training and exercise if you need to, but don't take chances with your future health like that for dubious incremental gains in the present. That's just insane.
#23
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any benefit would be so marginal that it's basically the same as tossing your money in the toilet.
studies show that drinking additional liquids during excerise increase performance. that's proven. nothing is even proven with creatine.
so, have an extra glass of water or gaterade while you cycle. there, i just saved you $30 bucks.
studies show that drinking additional liquids during excerise increase performance. that's proven. nothing is even proven with creatine.
so, have an extra glass of water or gaterade while you cycle. there, i just saved you $30 bucks.
#24
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What ever the Facts are about it I will not ever recomend it or take it.
#25
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Well.. it might have some effect with sprint training and improving your jump. But that's a small 2-5% of total training time for most cyclists. Won't do squat for your average-speed (TT) or your hillclimbs.