When
to Use Creatine Supplements: The Secret Revealed
By Spencer Hunt
When exactly should you use Creatine Supplements?
How do you use it for
optimum performance/gain?
Is it best BEFORE or AFTER a workout?
Or is it best taken during a workout?...
If you are taking creatine
during your exercise or even 20 minutes prior to your exercise,
you could be destroying your chances at any muscle gains!
I have been
lifting for many years, and I have used several of the most popular
sports supplements such as creatine and CoQ10, sports drinks, antioxidants,
whey protein drinks, and many other less known supplements. I have
spoken with other athletes and sports trainers about how and when
to use creatine, and have gotten a lot of mixed responses, so I
decided to do some more in depth research.
I spoke with a college
professor who teaches upper-division biochemistry, and I found shocking
information though, about WHEN to use creatine.
First off, I will let
you know that, although you can contact me through my site for sports
supplements, I am not a creatine dealer. I do not sell, nor do I
recommend a certain name brand or creatine here in this article
or on my site. I have found a product that I like much better. You
will have to choose what works best for you. You will just want
to do your research.
Creatine supplements
have been known to pull water into the muscles, which adds size.
But if you want to get size difference from muscle, and not water...then
read on...
I have seen creatine
advertised for maximized strength and quicker recovery. I don’t
agree with the validity of that statement. I do not see how either
of these statements are true. Rather, it seems that added creatine
could help improve the “length of time” before muscle
failure, while working out. I am just trying to point out that you
cannot always trust everything that you read online.
The worse thing that
you could do, would be to consume the supplements right before exercise!
You will actually NOT want to take creatine during or right before
a workout. This would cause the creatine to pull phosphates OFF
of the ATP, resulting in ADP, resulting in faster muscle fatigue.
What you want, is for the creatine to pull phosphate off of some
food that you eat (instead of from your own body’s ATP), and
to then use those phosphates to create new ATP. Allow me to reveal
to you a simple way to do it right.
How Creatine Works:
I have been weight lifting
for years. I workout almost daily, but just to stay fit, not to
be ranked in any competitions. If you are an avid muscle builder,
you most likely already know what ATP is.
You are probably already
aware that in order for any muscle to contract, energy has to be
released through the breakdown of ATP. While doing heavy weight-training,
you are in doing anaerobic exercise. Once you run out of ATP…
you reach muscle failure.
ATP stands for Adenosine Tri-Phosphate (3 phosphates)
ADP stands for Adenosine Di-Phosphate (2 phosphates)
The body creates ATP
through chemical reactions that take many steps, such as glycolisis
and other reactions. These reactions are often just forcing the
bi-products of ATP breakdown (ADP), back together in order to make
ATP again. Here is where the creatine comes into play. Your body
needs phosphate in order to force the ADP back into ATP for muscle
use. In order for creatine phosphate to be created, a chemical reaction
must take place, in which the creatine monohydrate, a natural dietary
substance found in meats (or in supplements in this case), is converted
to the creatine phosphate form.
Red meat is the best
source of creatine, however, there is only about 1 gram per pound
of meat. Your body naturally produces creatine in the liver, pancreas,
and kidneys, but they only excrete about 1 to 2 grams of creatine
per day. Thus, the reason why many choose to use creatine supplementation.
Many sites will tell
you about the suggested amounts to take, and about the loading phase
for the first week, and the first month, but they do not all seem
to agree on WHEN to take it. You can find more about creatine in
general, at this page: http://ezinearticles.com/?Creatine-Monohydrate---Athletic-Boost-or-Demise?-Tips-and-Information&id=296293
When should you use creatine?
Should you use it before
your workout, during your workout, or after? In learning the biochemistry
and how creatine supplementation works, I found out that the information
that I had gotten from everyone else was slightly misinformed.
So when do you take it?
Make certain that you consume your creatine supplement WITH food,
and WELL before (maybe 45 minutes to 1 hour or more) any exercise.
This is how you will maximize your benefits. The creatine supplement
will only work to pull phosphates off of something, so it needs
to go with food in your body in order to use the phosphate from
your food, to change your ADP to ATP.
glyconutrients supplements
Spencer Hunt is a health
coach and an athlete, who uses glyconutritionals, and shares them
with others who want to have great health results. Spencer helps
people to learn about the glyconutrients products and benefits,
since they work so well and have no known 'bad side-effects'. http://www.ifoundhealth.com
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