ZRod
Active member
I was a little shocked when I first read it so I reread it several times, he definitely appears to be calling for almost 30g a day. I haven't read anything else contradicting or confirming this except for bro science, which say you'll just pee it out and waste money. I wish he would have cited the studies so I could look at what he's referencing and how the ran their trails.Because of the gap in research, I have to make some assumptions, but I’ll make reasonable ones. When we use these numbers to look at whole-body creatine status, we see that in order to increase the amount of creatine we carry to a level above the baseline (1g/lb), we need at least two grams per day for maintenance, plus 0.4g for every lean pound of muscle. Using the example of a 200 pound male with 10 percent body fat, we can give a rough estimate of at least 60 pounds of skeletal muscle. This would yield a reasonable calculatin of:
(0.4g/lb * 60 lbs)/0.95 + 2g ≈ 27.3gMy hypothesis is that this would be the minimum amount of creatine needed on a daily basis to maintain maximum intracellular levels (the division by 0.95 takes into account the amount of creatine absorbed by the rest of the tissue in the body). I’m saying this is the minimum daily amount needed because the well-controlled research shows that using the standard 2g/day dosing returns intra-muscular levels of creatine back to normal within 6 weeks.
There’s no need for a loading period if you’re going by these formulas. If you’re fairly lean, this leads to a simple formula to calculate your daily creatine intake:
In Pounds: Bodyweight * 0.15 = grams of creatine monohydrate to ingestIn Kilograms: Body mass * 0.3 = grams of creatine monohydrate to ingestEven though I started from the actual difference in what muscles can hold, you’ll notice that these calculations give numbers that approximate the 20 grams studies, since many of the participants were around the 150 pound threshold. Unfortunately, the researchers didn’t extend their research to include the rest of the world.
NOTE: These formulas appear to overestimate needs, but since one gram of creatine monohydrate is only 88 percent creatine, the overage takes this into account.
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