van Loon Luc J C, Oosterlaar Audrey M, Hartgens Fred, Hesselink Matthijs K C, Snow Rodney J, Wagenmakers Anton J M
Nutrition and Toxicology Research Institute Maastricht (NUTRIM), Department of Human Biology, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Clin Sci (Lond). 2003 Feb;104(2):153-62. doi: 10.1042/CS20020159.
Most research on creatine has focused on short-term creatine loading and its effect on high-intensity performance capacity. Some studies have investigated the effect of prolonged creatine use during strength training. However, studies on the effects of prolonged creatine supplementation are lacking. In the present study, we have assessed the effects of both creatine loading and prolonged supplementation on muscle creatine content, body composition, muscle and whole-body oxidative capacity, substrate utilization during submaximal exercise, and on repeated supramaximal sprint, as well as endurance-type time-trial performance on a cycle ergometer. Twenty subjects ingested creatine or a placebo during a 5-day loading period (20 g.day(-1)) after which supplementation was continued for up to 6 weeks (2 g.day(-1)). Creatine loading increased muscle free creatine, creatine phosphate (CrP) and total creatine content ( P <0.05). The subsequent use of a 2 g.day(-1) maintenance dose, as suggested by an American College of Sports Medicine Roundtable, resulted in a decline in both the elevated CrP and total creatine content and maintenance of the free creatine concentration. Both short- and long-term creatine supplementation improved performance during repeated supramaximal sprints on a cycle ergometer. However, whole-body and muscle oxidative capacity, substrate utilization and time-trial performance were not affected. The increase in body mass following creatine loading was maintained after 6 weeks of continued supplementation and accounted for by a corresponding increase in fat-free mass. This study provides definite evidence that prolonged creatine supplementation in humans does not increase muscle or whole-body oxidative capacity and, as such, does not influence substrate utilization or performance during endurance cycling exercise. In addition, our findings suggest that prolonged creatine ingestion induces an increase in fat-free mass.
大多数关于肌酸的研究都集中在短期肌酸负荷及其对高强度运动能力的影响上。一些研究调查了力量训练期间长期使用肌酸的效果。然而,关于长期补充肌酸效果的研究却很缺乏。在本研究中,我们评估了肌酸负荷和长期补充对肌肉肌酸含量、身体成分、肌肉和全身氧化能力、次最大运动期间底物利用、重复超最大冲刺以及在自行车测力计上的耐力型计时赛表现的影响。20名受试者在为期5天的负荷期(20克·天⁻¹)内摄入肌酸或安慰剂,之后持续补充长达6周(2克·天⁻¹)。肌酸负荷增加了肌肉游离肌酸、磷酸肌酸(CrP)和总肌酸含量(P<0.05)。如美国运动医学学院圆桌会议所建议的,随后使用2克·天⁻¹的维持剂量,导致升高的CrP和总肌酸含量下降,游离肌酸浓度维持不变。短期和长期补充肌酸均改善了在自行车测力计上重复超最大冲刺期间的表现。然而,全身和肌肉氧化能力、底物利用和计时赛表现并未受到影响。肌酸负荷后体重的增加在持续补充6周后得以维持,且由去脂体重的相应增加所导致。本研究提供了确凿证据,表明人类长期补充肌酸不会增加肌肉或全身氧化能力,因此不会影响耐力自行车运动期间的底物利用或表现。此外,我们的研究结果表明,长期摄入肌酸会导致去脂体重增加。