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Originally Posted by mkmadsen
My six day split is at the bottom of my post in the thread linked above. I know quite a bit about training, etc. as I make diet plans and help others train when they come up to me asking advice at the gym, but I just havn't gotten involved in the supplememnt world. I dont want to take creatine as there have been no studies on the long term side effects and I want to avoid bloating and the quantity of sugars suggested to be taken with it to make it effective in pushing the nutrients into the muscles.
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Originally Posted by mkmadsen
I dont want to take creatine as there have been no studies on the long term side effects and I want to avoid bloating and the quantity of sugars suggested to be taken with it to make it effective in pushing the nutrients into the muscles.
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Steven Scott Plisk, director of sports conditioning at Yale University says, "it has been used in the United Kingdom since the early 1980's without any problems... if creatine caused long-term side effects, there would be indicators in the shorter studies. With anabolic steroids, you see some signs in the short term that warn you about what's coming in the long term, and you don"t see any of that with creatine (7)." There have been several studies conducted on creatine supplementation, which concluded that long term creatine use has no side effects (8 and 9). 7. Hawes, Kay. Creatine Boom Creates Administrative Challenges. The NCAA News. September 14, 1998. http://www.ncaa.org/news/1998/199809...e/3532n03.html 8. Poortmans, Jacques R. and Marc Francaux. Long-term Oral Creatine Supplementation Does not Impair Renal Function in Healthy Athletes. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 31 (1999): 1108-1111. 9. Schilling, Brian K., et al. Creatine Supplementation and Health Variables: a Retrospective Study. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 33 (2001): 183-186 |