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KR10
Creatine - Additional Information
What is Creatine?
Creatine is a natural constituent of a normal diet. Muscle foods such
as steak and sushi are often quoted as being high in Creatine. However,
vegetarian sources do exist, juniper berries being a particularly good
example. Creatine is found in high concentrations in human muscle where
it plays an important part in the energy production process. Normally
this Creatine is provided from the diet but the body does have the ability
to manufacture Creatine from the amino acids Arginine, Glycine and Methionine.
It appears that because of the changes in people’s dietary habits
they are receiving less Creatine in their diet and have a sub optimal
store of Creatine in the muscle. This is especially so for vegetarian
athletes. By supplementing Creatine in the diet it is possible to increase
the Creatine in muscle and improve performance.
What does Creatine do?
Athletes require a continual supply of energy for high performance activity.
This energy is supplied to the muscle in the form of ATP (Adenosine
Triphosphate). There is barely enough ATP to fuel more than a second
of strenuous activity.
The body manufactures ATP from carbohydrate, fat and protein in the
diet. Fat can be used to make a lot of ATP but this is a slow process.
The body can manufacture ATP from carbohydrate far more quickly but
even the break down of carbohydrate by anaerobic glycolysis cannot
provide ATP fast enough for very explosive events. When the body has
a sudden increase in demand for energy it has to rely upon a bank of
immediately available energy – the Creatine Phosphate Energy
System.
Creatine Phosphate can “donate” phosphate groups in order
to re-charge ATP. The use of Creatine Phosphate to recharge ATP during
sudden increases in energy demand gives time for Carbohydrate metabolism
to be “fired up”. Then during less intense periods the energy
from carbohydrate metabolism can be used to pay back into the Creatine
bank to recharge the Creatine Phosphate. There is enough Creatine Phosphate
to fuel about 5 seconds of a 100m sprint. As Creatine Phosphate can
recycle ATP faster than Carbohydrate metabolism, the athlete can put
out more power and accelerate faster when using Creatine Phosphate.
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SCIENCE
IN SPORT CREATINE
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