Home / Bodybuilding Supplements / Creatine / Taking Creatine Supplements

Should I Take Creatine Supplements?

Ultimately, the decision on whether or not to use creatine supplements in your weight gain program will depend on a cost/benefit analysis, your ethical position on the use of dietary supplements and your comfort level with the safety of use. As creatine safety is covered elsewhere (and, in my opinion, they are extremely safe supplements for most prospective users) this page will focus on the expense as compared to the benefits of usage and the ethics of use.

By itself, the expense is not necessarily overwhelming. Supplementing with 5 grams of quality creatine monohydrate powder daily can be done for less than 20 cents a day.

However, in order to reap the benefits, you must be additionally supplying your body with a good muscle building diet including a lot of protein and other nutrients. You should also be taking a good multi-vitamin. When you add the costs of these things to the costs of creatine supplements, you can begin to see some bigger expense numbers.

Taking creatine supplements will never be more important than giving your body the necessary nutrition to build muscle. They will never be more important than proper training. All of creatine's abilities to help you build muscle are dependant on these things.

You can build significant muscle with a good diet, proper training and no supplements. Without a good diet and proper training you won't build significant muscle no matter what supplements you take. Accepting this fact as fact will save you a lot of frustration and money.

For creatine supplements to be most effective and therefore cost-efficient at helping you gain weight and build muscle you must be....

  1. Dieting consistently for weight gain and therefore providing the body with an excess of calories from which to build muscle - Weight Gain Diet.
  2. Training consistently with heavy weights and great intensity - Weight Training Program.
  3. Supplementing smartly. This means paying attention to dosage, timing, loading, etc. You can dramatically improve your creatine results simply by learning how to effectively use it.

If you are not doing the above three things, you will not be getting the best results possible from use and you may not get any results at all. You might as well not waste your money and time.

Check out Marc David's Creatine True or False Quiz. While geared at teens, it is true for anyone - if you answer false to any of those questions then creatine is not where you should be spending your time and effort.

Now, when you have these things covered, creatine supplements can definitely help you accomplish some amazing things...

When To First Consider
Using Creatine Supplements

If you are just beginning training, just moving off the couch and into the gym, this may not be the time to invest in supplementation. Providing your body with good muscle building nutrition will give you the ability to make some very good and fast muscle gains. Supplementing certainly wouldn't hamper these gains (it would help) but its presence would not be the determining factor.

In other words, when just beginning, combine weight training with proper nutrition and your body will respond with or without creatine.

The best time to first consider using creatine supplements may be when you hit your first plateau. At this point you should be very disciplined with your weight gain diet, working out with great intensity and tracking your program religiously. If not, you probably haven't really hit a plateau, rather you just need to try harder.

A plateau is a place you will inevitably come to as your training continues. It is a like hitting a wall where everything that has worked in the past suddenly seems to stop working - the gains dry up and the body stops responding. Old tricks like changing your workout routines or upping your caloric intake seem to affect little change. Now you are ready to see if creatine can work some magic for you...

...and the good news is that it quite possibly can.

But be ready to work even harder at the gym, to take your intensity from 100% to 110% and beyond. Do this and you will truly see what creatine supplements can do.

Ethics of Using Creatine

Personally, I think the majority of people who question the ethics of use do so based on misinformation. A disturbing number of people operate under the impression that creatine is a steroid or is at least closely related. It is not.

It is true that both anabolic steroids and creatine are ergogenic or performance enhancing bodybuilding supplements. However, this is where the similarities end. Steroids are hormones, creatine is protein.

Creatine can rightly be classified as a dietary supplement where anabolic steroids cannot. Theoretically one could consume enough creatine rich food to equate to the creatine levels that can otherwise be attained through supplementation.

The confusion about the differences between creatine and steroids likely goes back to Mark McGwire's 1998 admission that he had used both prohormones and creatine (and later it became clear that he had also used anabolic steroids). From then on, the two have been associated together in a lot of people's minds. The media can still occasionally be caught calling creatine a steroid.

The facts are that creatine has a lot more in common with Vitamin C than it does with steroids.

I still get the occasional email from a trainer that goes like this...

"I want to keep my training natural so I am not using creatine. I am taking glutamine, arginine and a multi-vitamin."

The flaw in this logic is that glutamine, arginine and creatine are all amino acids. It is impossible to make the argument that you are more natural by foregoing creatine but engaging in glutamine or arginine supplementation.

It is also difficult to make the argument that the creatine user is any more unnatural than the average person who pops a multi-vitamin every morning. The concepts are exactly the same - in an effort to make sure they receive maximum coverage of nutrients important to their health and goals, both groups are supplementing their diets with an (by the strictest definition) "unnatural source."

"Natural bodybuilding" or "natural training" can have different meanings to different people. How you define it is up to you. But rest assured that despite its reputation, creatine is just a dietary supplement.

More questions about creatine supplements?

Check out this site's Creatine FAQ for a long list of typical questions and links to the answers, everything from how much and when to use it to whether or not is causes hair loss???

 

Related Articles

All The Weight and Muscle Gain Supplement Articles

Creatine Creatine: A Muscle Building Ally
What it is, what it does, how it benefits the athlete, and the research that backs it up.
Taking Creatine For Maximum Effect

How To Take Creatine For Maximum Effect
How to take creatine, creatine dosage and issues related to effective use for maximum muscle gain.

Creatine Effects The Effects of Creatine Supplementation
How creatine works within the body to help the trainer gain weight and build muscle.
Creatine Dangers

Creatine Dangers: A Look At The Safety Of Use
The known side effects of supplementation, the hidden dangers and whether or not it is safe.

Marc David

Should Teens Use Creatine?
Not an easy question but Marc provides some insight. Good advice not just for teens.

Best Use of Weight and Muscle Gain Supplements

Best Use of Weight Gain and Muscle Supplements
Learn how to pick and correctly use ONLY those supplements that will actually help you.

Muscle Building Program Reviews All The Top
Muscle Building
Programs Reviewed
Bodybuilding Supplement Guide Proven Effective
Bodybuilding
Supplement Guide

 

Muscle Building Gurus
The Gurus of
Muscle Building

Sean Nalewanyj
Anthony Ellis
Vince Delmonte
Will Brink
Jeff Anderson
Tom Venuto
Marc David
Dr. Franco-Obregón

 

 

FREE
Bodybuilding Ebooks

The very best in free ebooks and downloads to help you train, diet and track for maximum muscle building results.

 

 

 

Last Update:
June 2, 2007
This site is solely for informational and educational purposes. It is not intended as medical advice.
Consult a physician before beginning any new exercise, nutrition or supplementation program...
Full Disclaimer